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Coping
with the 9.11.01 Aftermath

Pictorial Mood Reflecting Sidebars of The Aftermath
The Artistic
Content:
On the Internet
Websites:
- 911--The September 11 Project- Cultural
Intervention in Civic Society
- Americans For the
Arts
- Art Fighting Terror
Gallery of Art to Honor Our Heroes-Those Who Lived and Those Who Died. Ed
Fisher, the creator of this website, states: "I'm hoping that Art
Fighting
Terror can attract substantive submissions by artists who can create concepts
that can have practical value in raising world consciousness to support the
war on terrorism over the long haul." [Note: This site is a
comprehensive collection of the latest motivational art concerning the Message
and Legacy of 9.11. We need to remember: Not to forget-Why we are in the Fight
Against Terrorism for the Long Haul!]
- Art Now:
Nationwide Artistic Responses to the September 11 Tragedy and Its Aftermath
- Artists Network
- The Arts
Rebuild New York Cultural Programming in Response to the Crisis in NYC
-
The Art of War & Peace Gallery
- The Healing Power of the
Arts
- The Legacy Project
gathering place for people interested in the enduring
legacies of the many violent traumas of the 20th century
- One People One World art,
music, pictures, links in a beautiful tribute
-
Remembering 11 September 2001 through Arts and Words a live Journal
- Tower of Light Project
- WHY-Art about the attack on the World
Trade Center & Pentagon -
www.whyproject.org
-
Public
project by Hans Haacke from Creative Times in Memory of 9.11.
Hans Haacke's poster project-white
posters featuring negative space of the World Trade Center towers'
silhouette-commemorates September 11th. Starting on the six-month anniversary
of the attacks through March 25, 2002, Haacke's posters have appeared on
scaffolding and media walls across the City with remnants of previous posters
occupying the void of the missing towers. Haacke's project reminds us that the
events of September 11th have created a filter through which we experience our
lives.
- Sword of Justice
by Mike Wimmer: In his own words:
The painting was inspired by
the September 11th attack. I painted this image immediately after
the attack and the response was so great that I created the poster as a way to
help in the only way I could.
-
"Seen from Above" by
Daniel Kohn -
Vanderbilt Hall, Grand Central Station - New York,
Grand Central Terminal Installation Establishes a Place for Reflection
on the Events of September 11
- 9-11 Anniversary Exhibits at
Museum of the City of New York
- 9-11 Anniversary Exhibits at New York
Historical Society
- New York City : After the Fall
-
NYC
Firemen by Devon H.C. Crutcher. In his
own words: "All of the details of his appearance make me believe
that as long as there are souls like him in this world, the world is worth
living in. The world is not just to be lived in, but to be appreciated,
respected and loved. This world is blessed by the heroism of souls such as
this fireman. I feel blessed to be able to paint a soul so beautiful..."
Visit his site for more insight into this moving painting by this truly gifted
artist.
- "I am Happy" says NY Fireman by Michael Nooy, 3, Im de la
Gavelière,13007 Marseilles. In his own words: the portrait of
an on 11.09.01 disappeared fireman, but who resuscitated under the artist's
paintbrush, and who now wishes to address to those he so abruptly left behind
a message of consolation. The words are spoken by the heroic rescuer
in order to "put some heart into the guys". At the same time he sends
some pictures featuring scenes of the world he today lives in.
-
Online Articles:
-
Art emerges from tragedy, as it should
Response: Fiber, water, even drumbeats bring solace in the aftermath of
shattering events. from Baltimore Sun, September 17, 2001
- Peering Into
the Abyss of the Future from New York Times, September 23, 2001
-
Children's Drawings from New York Times, September 30, 2001
-
New York's Apocalypse In Pictures A SoHo Photo Exhibit
Looks Back At Sept. 11 Without Blinking from Washington Post, October 22,
2001
-
Art Enlisted to Serve History from LA Times October 29, 2001
- Joel Meyerwitz Photography
website with Archival Pictures of Ground Zero for the New York Museum of Art
Interview from Fresh Air Online
-
Children's Worries Take New Shape
Artwork Reveals the Effects of Sept. 11
from Washington Post, November 2, 2001
-
The Art of Aftermath, Distilled in Memory from New York Times, November
14, 2001
- Catching the World in the Act of Changing from
New York Times, November 22, 2001
- Arts in the
aftermath from Christian Science Monitor, December 28, 2001
-
Offering Beauty, and Then Proof That Life Goes On from New York Times,
December 30, 2001
- The ART Project, Artists Respond to
Terrorism
- Art
Now: Beyond the Healing from WireNews, January 18, 2002
-
For Artists, a Sanctuary From Sept. 11 from New York Times, January 23,
2002
-
Amid the Ashes, Creativity from New York Times, February 1, 2002
-
Responding to Crisis, Art Must Look Beyond It from New York Times, March
3, 2002
-
Prayerfully and Powerfully, New York City Before and After New York Times,
March 6, 2002
- A
Theatrical Candle in a Shrine to Sept. 11 from New York Times, May 1, 2002
-
Tragedy Pierces the Heart, Memory the Skin from New York Times, April 4,
2003
Afghanistan Related Art Information:
-
Afghan Art Dispersed by the Winds of War from New York Times November 1,
2001
-
Afghan
Archivist of Culture about Lemar-Aftaab from Wired News, November 6,
2001
-
Lemar-Aftaab: Afghanmagazine.com
an online magazine on Afghanistan, from a native Afghan living in California
-
Taliban Had Wrong Impression from Washington Post, January 2, 2002
-
Afghanistan's Monument of Rubble Washington Post, March 6, 2002
-
Cultural Salvage in Wake of Afghan War from New York Times, April 15,
2002



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