Julie Dermansky Exhibition, New York, Show, Architecture, Curator, Building, USA

Memorial Architecture Exhibition : Julie Dermansky

Memorial Sites : American Institute of Architects New York Chapter

Sep 9, 2008

Julie Dermansky Exhibition

MEMORIAL SITES: NEW YORK TO NAIROBI
PHOTOGRAPHS BY JULIE DERMANSKY

Memorial in Oklahoma City
Memorial in Oklahoma City

The American Institute of Architects New York Chapter announces the opening of an exhibition of acclaimed artist Julie Dermansky’s photographs of memorial sites and a related panel discussion. Opening and panel are on 9/10/08 with the exhibition running through 10/3/08.

The Center for Architecture presents an exhibition of Julie Dermansky’s memorial photographs and a related panel discussion at 6:00pm on September 10th. On the eve of September 11th, the “Memorial and Meaning” panel discussion will be moderated by Lance Jay Brown, FAIA, competition advisor to the National 9/11 Memorial at the World Trade Center.

Artist Statement remarks by Julie Dermansky will be followed by a memorial architecture panel with Peter Eisenman, FAIA, architect of the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe in Berlin; Frederic Schwartz FAIA, architect of the Westchester County 9/11 Memorial and the New Jersey 9/11 Memorial at Liberty State Park, New Jersey; and Michael Arad, AIA, architect of the National 9/11 Memorial at the World Trade Center, New York City. Rick Bell, FAIA, will serve as respondent.

The exhibition and panel reflects on the meaning and history of memorials while addressing site specificity and the culture of place. ”History belongs to all of us,” says Dermansky, “but it is the memorial site commemorating a particular historical moment and connecting it to the present that infiltrates our being and transcends history.” Dermansky is documenting memorials in diverse locations, from the site of the destroyed US Embassy in Nairobi, Kenya, to the Valhalla, New York 9/11 memorial by Frederic Schwartz.

The exhibition also includes recent images from Hangar 17 at JFK Airport, where the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is storing artifacts from the World Trade Center. Her global perspective explores the range of realized memorial design solutions. With photos selected by curator Tracey Hummer, the distinguished writer and critic, the New York to Nairobi memorial exhibition captures the irony of sacred sites converted to tourist destinations.

Dermansky’s photographs capture traces of mankind’s unthinkable acts strewn across the planet in the form of monuments and residual artifacts. By presenting a global record of architectural structures, her work engages people in addressing issues of injustice and genocide that they might otherwise avoid when presented in the form of current events.

Rick Bell noted that “the photos of Julie Dermansky record the remembrance of horrific events through a lens that makes them immediate and palpable – you do not walk away from these images indifferent or unmoved.” Dermansky’s images tie the past to the present and start a dialogue about society’s obligation to honor and preserve unspoken history through the architecture of memorials.

A photographer who began her career as a sculptor, Julie Dermansky has been featured in numerous publications including the New York Times. Her background in fine arts adds to her compelling vision. Julie’s photographs make us ask if the words “never again” are just a slogan. This fall, the artist will be named as an Affiliate Scholar at the Rutgers University Center for the Study of Genocide & Human Rights.

Julie Dermansky Memorial Architecture exhibition text + image from CC Sullivan 090908

The Center for Architecture
536 LaGuardia Place
New York, New York 10012
T 212 683 0023 F 212 696 5022
E-mail info@aiany.org

About AIA New York Chapter
The AIA New York Chapter is the oldest and largest chapter of the American Institute of Architects. We are dedicated to three goals: design excellence, public outreach, and professional development.

The Chapter’s members include more than 4,000 practicing architects, allied professionals, students, and public members interested in architecture and design. To fulfill its mission, the Chapter sponsors an array of programs, usually held at the Center for Architecture, that explore the role of architects in housing, planning, historic preservation, and urban design among other topics, as well as our annual Design Awards Program for architecture, interior architecture and unrealized projects.

In addition, the Chapter publishes a magazine, OCULUS, coordinates 24 committees and works with its charitable affiliate the Center for Architecture Foundation to provide scholarship and educational opportunities for students and the general public. For more information on the American Institute of Architects New York Chapter, visit the website www.aiany.org or contact AIA New York, 212-683-0023

Location: 536 LaGuardia Place, New York City, USA

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