I swear, if a body had a
mind to it, she could post every day of the year about a different war. Even
having a concentration on modern wars involving mass armies of the past couple
of hundred years gives one considerable scope.
But today is the 73rd
anniversary of the launch of Operation
Overlord, which we mostly know as the D-Day landings. To mark this
occasion, I’m sharing one of those installations that use art to examine
historical events.
In 2014 we had a
spectacular example in the “Blood
Swept Lands and Seas of Red” installation at the Tower of London: 888,246 red
ceramic poppies falling from a bastion window and filling the dry moat
completely. Each poppy represented one dead British or Commonwealth soldier
from the 1914-18 war. Individually, the poppies were poignant; in the aggregate
they were appalling.
Another example is the AIDS
Memorial Quilt, more than 48,000 3’x6’ panels, each representing someone
who died of AIDS. And the Paper Clip Project created by children at a middle
school in Whitwell, Tenn. They collected six million paper clips to try to wrap
their heads around the magnitude of the Holocaust.
In each of these cases, people
used art to connect to the otherwise difficult-to-fathom magnitude of loss.
Four years ago two
British artists created stencils of the outlines of fallen soldiers, and
invited volunteers to etch in the shapes 9000 times on the sand at Arromanches,
a flat stretch of sand close to the landing site of Gold Beach. Arromanches was
the site of one of the artificial harbors known as Mulberries, used to supply
the invaders.
This installation was
called The Fallen 9000 because the
artists put the number of dead—Allies, Germans and civilians—at 9000 for the
first day. Although it’s frankly difficult to pinpoint the actual numbers, 9000
is as good as any for the purpose of making a point. Jamie Wardley and Andy
Moss embarked on the project to mark World Peace Day in 2013. Their original
team comprised 60 volunteers, but on the day they were joined by another 500
locals. Using the stencils and rakes, they etched 9000 outlines of individual
death along the strand.
As I’ve mentioned
before, I truly love this kind of installation—not only the intersection of art
and history, but the ephemeral nature of the piece. The 560 people on that
September day had to work quickly, and within a few hours the water had washed
away all their efforts. Kind of like the
grass in Carl Sandburg’s poem.
The Fallen | Lest we
Forget from Aberration on
Vimeo.
Something to think about
on this anniversary of sacrifice and perseverance.
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