Empire of Death, Acrylic on masonite, 24 x 24. INSIDE THE WAR ROOM Installation by William Ayton. Direct Art Magazine

Similar documents
Comfort Women Memorial by Steven Whyte, Sculptor

Caught in the middle. Entertainment Performing & Visual Arts

Critics Forum Visual Arts Reflections in the Aftermath of an Exhibition By Ramela Grigorian Abbamontian

Lara Baladi: Diary of The Future

From Montage to Mounting: The Surprisingly Sexual Drawings of Sergei Eisenstein

The Nazi Drawings. A Documentary by Lane Wyrick. By Artist Mauricio Lasansky

Invisible Man - History and Literature. new historicism states that literature and history are inseparable from each other (Bennett

JONATHAN HARVEY S TOMBEAU DE MESSIAEN A FITTING TRIBUTE TO A GREAT COMPOSER

The Literary. Essay. Comparison/Contrast: Assignment: For Your Information: How to Write a Literary Comparison/Contrast. Essay.

Romare Bearden: Working with Juxtaposition

David Ethics Bites is a series of interviews on applied ethics, produced in association with The Open University.

PERFORMING HISTORIES: WAFAA BILAL IN CONVERSATION WITH SARA RAZA

Opening: July 2, 4-6pm July 4, 5, 6 open: 11am - 5pm

How can Art Enhance Outdoor Experiences?

Sanderson, Sertan. Largest David Lynch retrospective to date on show in Maastricht. Deutsche Welle. 30 November Web.

This will count as a major assessment (test) grade, so be sure to put forth your best effort on this!

STUDENT NAME: Thinking Frame: Tanner Lee

(Courtesy of an Anonymous Student. Used with permission.) Capturing Beauty

Get ready to take notes!

RESEARCH. How is propaganda art used to influence people s thoughts?

London Pays Homage to Chantal Akerman with Major Retrospective of Her Installation Work

Interview with Ghada Amer

2018 Welcome to the American

What most often occurs is an interplay of these modes. This does not necessarily represent a chronological pattern.

What happened in Omagh? An introduction to Irish history for Year 7

Open-ended Questions for Advanced Placement English Literature and Composition,

Let Freedom Ring: Music & Poetry of Black History. About the Production...

Art and Community Art and Social Protest/Conscience

The Man, His Art and His Philosophy: Peace and Conflict Resolution Analysis of the Works of Jai Mariali

YOUTH, MASS CULTURE, AND PROTEST: THE RISE AND IMPACT OF 1960S ANTIWAR MUSIC

fred forest 23 june - 5 august 2017 press release

Works of Art, Duration and the Beholder

On the Pursuit of Happiness. Camus creates a uniquely absurdist view through much of his book, The Stranger

Local News Can Be For The People Even If It s Not By The People

A Most Extraordinary Technique

Disrupting the Ordinary

Creating classy course video clips without breaking the bank. Heather Stearns Orlando Utilities Commission Orlando, FL

Emily Dickinson's Poetry Emily Dickinson ( )

inside FLY THE NEW VICTORY THEATER / NEWVICTORY.ORG/SCHOOLTOOL INSIDE BEFORE EN ROUTE AFTER

Romeo and Juliet in Bosnia

Floyd D. Tunson: Son of Pop

Social justice has the problem of being interpreted from many points of view.

BUILDING MEANINGFUL INTERPRETATION AROUND UNSETTLING CONTEMPORARY ART

William J. Devlin and Shai Biderman (eds.), The Philosophy of David Lynch, Lexington: The University Press of Kentucky, 2011, 248 pp.

VENUS MANHATTAN LOS ANGELES

Have you seen these shows? Monitoring Tazama! (investigate show) and XYZ (political satire)

THEATRE OF THE ABSURD. 1950s-1960s Europe & U.S.

6 The Analysis of Culture

INTERPLAY BETWEEN TIME AND OPPORTUNITY WHEN AN INDIVIDUAL SEEKS TO CREATE A MEANINGFUL LIFE.

Neighbourhood Watch. By Lally Katz CONTEMPORARY AUSTRALIAN THEATRE PRACTICES HSC DRAMA

RONDALL REYNOSO.

Radiance Versus Ordinary Light: Selected Poems by Carl Phillips The Kenyon Review Literary Festival, 2013

MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM. artquest GAME. 700 NORTH ART MUSEUM DRIVE MILWAUKEE, WI w ww.mam.org

In the sculptures of these two artists, you can see the burning tragedy of Bastar

The Museum of Everything Exhibition #4. Conversation with Hiroshi Imanaka

Theatre theory in practice. Student B (HL only) Page 1: The theorist, the theory and the context

About The Film. Illustration by Ari Binus

Experiments and Experience in SP173. MIT Student

cover image: Repro (saints): Archangel Micahel after Dorko Topalski, 2018 [detail]

Resounding Experience an Interview with Bill Fontana

John Massier Visual Arts Curator

Humanities as Narrative: Why Experiential Knowledge Counts

Reza Aramesh. Gemma Tully in conversation with. 166 Features

Welcome to American Mosaic from VOA Learning English. We also tell about an organization that helps music students prepare for a career in music.

A Lovely Land is Ours...

Nickelodeon City: Pittsburgh at the Movies, (review)

an exhibition by Alec Shepley & John McClenaghen

Dead Treez. Artist Ebony G. Patterson: Thoughtful, Colorful, and a Big Personality. by Alexander Winter Published November 10, 2015.

Alternatives to. Live-Action Fiction Films

Jessica Backhaus. What Still Remains CURRENT PAST GRANT SUBMIT SUBSCRIBE ABOUT. Marlon Brando, Courtesy of Yancey Richardson Gallery.

Beyond the Elevator Speech: Writing and Talking about Your Work

History of Newspapers

Visit guide for teachers. Living with gods peoples, places and worlds beyond 2 November April 2018

Chapter 2: Karl Marx Test Bank

Fred Wilson s Un-Natural Histories: Trauma and the Visual Production of Knowledge

Mapping Justice with Letter Press Printing: The Bold Type Work of Amos Kennedy

2018 Welcome to the American

Art of the Everyday. Role of artists in the context of art of the everyday

2014 Press. earthdanceflorida.org earthdanceflorida.org

The Looking Glass. Elizabeth MacPherson Four 50 minute lessons Six Social Studies, Visual Arts, Language Arts

Yoshua Okón, still from Octopus (Pulpo), 2011; image courtesy the artist.

Hidden Traces. Memory, Family, Photography, and the Holocaust

Spellbound. The Feminine Soul. (1945) Directed by Alfred Hitchcock

Unit of Work: Representations of War

English 1 Mr. Pelster Fahrenheit 451 study questions. pp discussion questions

The New York State Post-Production Ecosystem Executive Summary December 2016

DE LA SALLE SCHOOL LEARNING PROGRAMME YEAR 8. Half Term 1a

Pina Discussion Guide

Reflections and Prints. Close Viewing

Individual Photo Story Elements Can you explain?

Elements of a Movie. Elements of a Movie. Genres 9/9/2016. Crime- story about crime. Action- Similar to adventure

Challenging Form. Experimental Film & New Media

and Urbanism Civic Art, Civic Life And finally there is this: Not all things are of equal value. Things

HAMLET. Visual Story. To help prepare you for your visit to Shakespeare s Globe. Relaxed Performance Sunday 12 August, 1.00pm

ArtsECO Scholars Joelle Worm, ArtsECO Director. NAME OF TEACHER: Ian Jack McGibbon LESSON PLAN #1 TITLE: Structure In Sculpture NUMBER OF SESSIONS: 2

CHINO VALLEY UNIFIED SCHOOL DISTRICT INSTRUCTIONAL GUIDE ART HISTORY

Adel Abdessemed L âge d or

THESIS MASKS AND TRANSFORMATIONS. Submitted by. Lowell K.Smalley. Fine Art Department. In partial fulfillment of the requirements

University of Leiden Masters in Film and Photographic Studies

Upper School Summer Required Assignments Books & Topics

Transcription:

Empire of Death, Acrylic on masonite, 24 x 24 INSIDE THE WAR ROOM Installation by William Ayton Direct Art Magazine Volume12, Fall-Winter 2005

Inside The War Room by Diana Ayton-Shenker Inside The War Room, you can t look away. The War Room, William T. Ayton s four-wall, painted installation, surrounds the viewer with stark, monochromatic images that explore and expose the human faces and consequences of war. Depicting four fundamental aspects of war: Warriors, Victims, Witnesses and The Aftermath, the installation compels viewers to confront themselves as they identify with and are moved by provocative, poignant figures that animate the wallsized panels. The impetus for The War Room came when a tapestry of Picasso s famous anti-war painting, Guernica, was covered up as the backdrop for a Colin Powell press conference at the U.N. (February 5, 2003) leading up to the Iraq conflict. As an artist, Ayton was outraged by this censorship, and quickly responded with the concept and initial sketches for his own epic, anti-war piece that would, by its very nature, be difficult to cover up or ignore. I knew I had to do something, says Ayton. The War Room is my statement. The installation gives testament to the potency of one artist s vision, and the importance of artistic freedom, especially during war time. Partly as a tribute to Guernica, The War Room s four panels are painted in black-and-white, with other references embedded within, such as a half-hidden horse in the Warriors panel alluding to Picasso s symbol for human nobility and vulnerability. The installation also pays homage to other artists and their treatment of the human condition, whether related to war or not. Goya s Horrors of War etchings, his black paintings, and various works by El Greco and Velazquez serve as indirect influences, as well as many others from fine art and popular culture. One commentator mentioned a resemblance between the Witnesses panel using a montage of disembodied heads, and the work of comic-book artist, Steve Ditko. Another saw resemblance to an Abu Ghraib photograph in the Warriors panel (though the artwork was conceived and developed nearly a year before the notorious photographic images were circulated). Throughout the installation, there are many references to other art works and visual iconography, both intended and unintentional. 48 Fall - Winter 2005 / Direct Art www.directart.org

THE WAR ROOM PANELS The Warriors this panel reflects the naked savagery of war. While inspired initially by events leading up to the Iraq war, the intention is to transcend the specifics of the current conflict to convey a more universal depiction of warriors. Particular uniforms or weapons are avoided; these could be combatants from any war. The central figure impales his victim with a spear-like tool. The other figures are caught up in the mayhem of violence and struggle. There is no sense of who is on which side the fight devolves into a vortex that sucks in everyone. To avoid the danger of glorifying war, the panel is viewed in juxtaposition to those depicting victims and witnesses. WAR ROOM IN NEW YORK Last year, The War Room had its world premiere with two room-sized versions of the installation exhibited concurrently (August - October 2004) in New York. One installation was shown in New York City (at chashama s new mid-town gallery and featured as part of the Imagine 04 Citywide Festival of Arts, Issues & Ideas); the other in Poughkeepsie, NY (at The Albert Shahinian Gallery of Fine Art, with support from the Dutchess County Arts Council). In addition, related works and preparatory studies for The War Room have been shown in galleries and online (The Limner Gallery, Phoenicia, NY; Gallery 218, Milwaukee, WI; The Gallery at the Warehouse, Washington D.C., and an online exhibition curated by WNYC). The War Room was awarded fiscal sponsorship of the New York Foundation for the Arts. The public response has been tremendous with visitors expressing cathartic relief, anguish and gratitude to experience such a moving and powerful art installation dealing with the human dimension of war. The War Room attracted around 1000 visitors and extensive media coverage, including reviews and mentions in The New York Times, The Boston Globe, The Wall Street Journal, The Poughkeepsie Journal, Chronogram, and Theatre2k.com. www.directart.org Fall - Winter 2005 / Direct Art 49

The Victims another vortex, this time of souls as they spiral both upward and downward. In fact, it s not clear if these are the dead, the physically wounded, or the spiritually wounded. The sense here is that we are all victims of war. There s an ambiguous, but irrepressible movement of figures in ascension and descent, cascading into each other, overwhelmed by the tumultuous forces that overtake them. Amidst the chaos and despair, there are moments of human tenderness, resistance and resilience. The New York City installation generated considerable attention as its opening coincided with the 2004 Republican National Convention (and related opposition protests) which took place just a few blocks from the gallery. In this politically charged atmosphere, people were espec ially struck by the capacity of Ayton s War Room to rise above the constraints of political platforms, reaching people through power of art. In addition to those who came to experience the installation itself, The War Room drew significant audiences for two standing-room only, literary events: a dramatic reading selected from War Letters edited by Andrew Carroll, and a poetry reading featuring Sharon Olds, Quincey Troupe, Luc Sante, Karen Swensen and Eliot Katz. The poetry reading and interviews with the artist were filmed for documentary films currently in production. Plans to schedule future installations are underway for the two existing versions (one comprises a room of four 10' h. x 16' w. panels; the other has four panels approximately 8' h. x 12' w. ); and opportunities are also being sought for additional versions. Ayton s original vision was to create a room with four panels similar in dimension to the Guernica (approximately 12' h. x 25' w.). Then, Ayton says, the circle would be complete. 50 Fall - Winter 2005 / Direct Art www.directart.org

The Witnesses a mass of silent heads, gathered together in judgement, prayer, silent observation, outrage or ignorance. The figures represent a wide array of reactions to war. Some of the witnesses are blindfolded or masked; others seem to penetrate the viewer with their piercing gaze, stare into the eyes of the warriors in the opposing panel, or simply look away. Some of the witnesses may also be warriors, or victims. After awhile, the distinctions start to blur and interrelationships emerge between the witnesses, victims and warriors. The Aftermath here, all is in ruins. War has taken its toll and all that remains are bits of war machinery, fragments of masonry and suggestions of body parts. The end of war is a desolate wasteland, devoid of human life or civilization. Perhaps new civilizations will arise from the rubble; perhaps they won t. A sliver of hope lies in the opening of The Aftermath panel, through which the viewer can glimpse the real world s/he has just left to enter the realm of The War Room. Exiting through this same opening, viewers re-enter the world outside The War Room with a profound sense of war s inhumanity and a renewed sense of hope upon leaving its insanity behind. To view images and read more about the project, visit www.warroomproject.org. Diana Ayton-Shenker has written extensively on culture and politics; her most recent book is A Global Agenda: Current Issues Before the United Nations. The curator of The War Room, she has collaborated with her husband William T. Ayton on several international art projects about human rights and peace. Ms. Ayton-Shenker has worked with the United Nations, taught at colleges and universities in New York and Paris, and currently runs the consulting firm Global Momenta. www.directart.org Fall - Winter 2005 / Direct Art 51