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"Absence
into Presence" was inspired by the life and memory
of Kristen Strouse, who was a student at the Parsons
School of Design in 2001. When asked by the Strouse
family to devise a memorial for Kristen, Parsons felt
that the best way to remember a talented and promising
young woman would be to showcase some of the wealth
of creativity that has been devoted to rememberance.
We hope that this exhibition honors Kristen's life,
and offers something of lasting benefit to students
and to the public.
"Absence Into Presence" examines the multitude
of ways in which men and women throughout history
have struggled to remember people, events and even
ideas through the media of art, architecture and design,
The exhibition considers the range of aesthetic, cultural
and political issues that affect and arise from the
process of rememberance, and explores a wide variety
of memorial and monumental structures and artworks,
from a range of cultures around the world,
In images by Walker Evans, William Eggleston,
Nadar and other distinquished photographers,
the exhibition presents some of the enduring milestones
of rememberance as well as lesser known but no less
compelling works. It explores the difficulty of memorializing
an event as complex and unfathomable as the Holocaust,
through projects that include Daniel Libeskind's
Jewish Museum Berlin, Rachel Whitereads's Judenplatz
memorial, the Anne Frank House and Karin Daan's
Homomonument, The show looks as well at how the great
architects Carlo Scarpa and Aldo Rossi used
the funerary genre to expand and enrich their own
work and the vocabulary of modern architecture.
In addition, "Absence Into Presence" will
feature works of personal rememberance, including
photographer Carla Shapiro's struggle to come
to terms, not only with the devastation of 9/11, but
with the inevitability of forgetting; Ken Aptekar's
consideration of his own idenity through the prism
of his grandmother's imaginary past; and video artist
Linda Montano's gripping account of her husbands
death. The exhibition also presents new and recent
projects, by British architect David Chipperfield,
Spain's Cesar Portela, the Dutch firm Mecanoo,
sculptor Brian Tolle, and New York's Architecture
Research Office.
"I am struck by the extraordinary variety, the
level of inspiration and the beatuy of the work on
display", said exhibition curator Marc Kristal.
"Some of these things are primitive, others exceptionally
sophisticated, some are even playful. But they're
all expressions of one of the profoundest of human
desires - to hold onto what matters, to never forget.
You can feel the power and the timelessness of that
impulse in everything in the show, whether it is something
as simple as a Sirige Mask in Mali or as grand as
the Taj Mahal."
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