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Baurmann
Brooks Coersmeier, Gisela Baurmann, Sawad Brooks, and Jonas Coersmeier
Click on any photo below to see a larger
version. All photos were taken by New Yorkled on the first day of
the exhibition.
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Main
WTC Memorial Finalists Page
All were on display at the Winter Garden
at the World Financial Center starting November 19th.
Through "Passages of Light : The Memorial Cloud," we
wish to create upon a site scarred by a terrifying loss, sorrow,
and grief, a work of shared and individual mourning, as well as
a gesture affirming our hopes, common dreams, and ability to rebuild.
Our intention is first to recognize and honor the victims of September
11, 2001 and February 26, 1993 within a special, shrouded, spiritual
space, protected from the noise and pace of the city by a crystalline
"cloud." The cloud's top surface is a translucent bandage
healing a wound. Level with "Ground Zero" (street level)
and permitting traversal, it reconnects the urban fabric of downtown.
On the ground beneath the cloud each of the 2,982 victims is represented
by a radiating circle of light embedded into the floor, which illuminates
the engraved name of the individual victim but also projects a subtle
ray of light upward into the cloud. During the day, the cloud, like
an undulating veil, a sinuous surface forming cathedral-like vaults,
channels daylight downward onto the field of names.
Together, the names form a design that we term the "Pompeii
Scheme," because it represents individuals equally in the course
of their lives, cut short by the attacks. A name appears near those
of the people with whom he or she died. For example, the approximately
1400 individuals who perished in Tower One define the largest field
of lights. This field is continuous with the group of approximately
600 who died in the second tower. The design's appearance reflects
the cloud's topology of cupolas. A "Line of Rescuers"
runs through both groups, where Firefighters, Police, and ordained
and medical people can be represented.
Our design is guided by our respect for the sacred ground. Accordingly,
we limit the cloud to touching the ground for support on only five
points; we judiciously open the earth beneath the World Trade Center
Tower footprints only to provide visitors access to the symbolic
"bedrock" level, creating thereby a processional passage
of light and subterranean darkness. The procession that carries
visitors beside the repository for the "unidentified remains"
connects both footprints with the channel along the exposed slurry
wall.
Through the Memorial Cloud we hope to elicit two more responses,
one highly physical, the other imaginative, both of awe. One recovers
a sensation associated with the World Trade Center Towers when we
recall standing in their presence: the urge to look skywards, a
vertical gesture associated with hope. With the second gesture we
seek to give expression to a relation between those we mourn and
those who live on affected by the tragedy and repercussions of the
attacks. This is a relation between the finite and the sublime.
The cloud's design as a bundle of 10,000 vertical conduits for light
which support each other structurally, distributing forces of tension
and compression, figuratively represents our shared responsiveness
to crisis and our cumulative strength.
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