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Logs at the Mount in Central Park |
Central Park's Mount (home to the park's
chief composting station) is one of my favorite places. Typically, it is filled with mountains of wood chips and logs that have not, as of yet, been chopped up. It's a haunting place particularly when some of the park's older trees find their way there as has been happening all too frequently of late.
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“Hiding your motives is despicable / the only way to be pure is to stay by yourself” (Jenny Holzer) |
Today, the Mount was home to something that was a bit more of a mystery -- a massive piece of broken marble inscribed on all visible sides with words. There it rested a top a pile of assorted debris with its broken corners carefully pieced together on top. Unexpected and strangely evocative of a gravestone.
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"Money Creates Taste" (Jenny Holzer) |
Upon arriving home,
I did a bit of googling. As it turns
out, the Public Art Fund had staged a showing of Jenny Holzer’s work --
Benches – in Central Park back in 1989. Holzer is a conceptual artist who is best
known for her “truisms”. Some examples
from the broken slab: “Money Creates
Taste” and “Charisma can be fatal.” The
first line of my find matches up to Bench 1 from that long ago exhibit -- "a man can not know what it’s like to be a
mother."
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"Charisma Can Be Fatal" (Jenny Holzer) |
A bit of further searching on the Web revealed that two of Holzer’s benches were a part of the
Common Ground installation at City Hall Park at the time Super Storm Sandy hit New York City last fall. The text on this slab does not match up to those nor does it match up with the text of a bench that was recently donated to Barnard College. Further Web searches revealed no record of other Holzer benches on display in New York City in recent months.
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"Your Oldest Fears are the Worst Ones" (Jenny Holzer) |
So it’s a bit of a mystery as to how the bench came to reside at the Mount. There’s a symmetry to its fate that I kind of like -- a broken piece of public art from a long ago Central Park exhibit now graces a corner of Central Park that is off the beaten path and a home to logs, wood chips, sand piles, and new paving stones for the park's many paths.
This hefty slab of
broken marble fits its new exhibit space -- surrounded as it is by broken trees
and other bits of debris from around the park. I, for one, am hoping it
stays for a while..
Update
The walk -- and find -- in this post occurred back in March. I submitted a shorter version of this piece to the
New York Times for
Metropolitan Diary (little slices of NY life by readers) and was contacted by Michael Pollak of the
Times a couple of weeks later with the back story and a request to publish it in
Answers to Questions about New York. Once I said yes, I had a seres of email exchanges with the photo editors asking for all my photos given that the Parks Department had removed the piece with the plan of returning it to Ms. Holzer. Much excitement ensued (of the be still my beating heart kind that is) as I thought about having a photo published in the Times! That would make up for not having a piece in
Metropolitan Diary. So I convinced myself that all the "sighing" about the small size of my image files would be just that -- sighing that is -- and I'd have a photo in the
Times. How cool would that be? Alas, that was not to be as it appears that the
Times finally got its professional photo in the story that was posted
online a couple of days ago.
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"Decency is a Relative Thing" (Jenny Holzer) |
Although it is nice to know that I was right about the work's provenance (thank you Michael Pollak), I am sad that my submission lead to Broken Art disappearing from the park. As much as I would have liked having a photo in the Times, the Mount was such a fitting final resting spot for Holzer's damaged work. Serendipity had produced the best kind of site-specific art -- a piece that melded seamlessly into its setting yet still provoked thought.
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"If You Live Simply" (Jenny Holzer) |
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