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s
the events of September 11 were commemorated this fall, sculptor
Patrick Morelli A.M. '68 was working on a commission for the State
of New Jersey--a memorial to the more than 700 state residents
killed in the terrorist attacks.
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| Memento Morelli:
incorporating humanity
into remembrance |
| photo: © patrick morelli |
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Morelli, whose work was unveiled in October at a ceremony for
the victims' families, says his purpose in creating the memorial
was
twofold. "My first thought in creating memorials is that they
do memorialize the event," he says. "But a memorial has
an equally important function, which is to move people from the
cycle of grief into the cycle of rebuilding. The energy and emotions
are channeled into something positive."
The memorial, located at Eagle Rock Reservation in West Orange,
overlooking Manhattan and where the towers once stood, combines
a formal list of the victims' names with the personal, a statue
of a young girl representing the families left behind. "People
need humanity," Morelli says. "So often, memorials are
thought of in terms that are grander in scale. That was one of
my concerns: How do I memorialize the names but also incorporate
the humanity?"
As he worked on the memorial, Morelli says, families would come
to visit and watch him sculpt. He kept the names of the victims
up on his studio wall, allowing him to look "at each individual
name. The humanity of it just hits you--it's not a statistic any
more. It's people. Names, ages, hometowns. I meet the families
and the children, and they tell me about the father, and one story
is more gut-wrenching than the other."
At the unveiling, Morelli spoke to the families. He planned to
talk about "the symbolism of the pieces, and to emphasize
that we're really here to dedicate ourselves to remembering those
who lost their lives, to maintaining a world of peace, but, I really
feel compelled to add, to find justice for those who were responsible
for the tragedy."
Ultimately, Morelli says he hopes the memorial will help bring
some measure of healing to its viewers. "It is by design that
we remember those we have lost, but it is also a reminder that
we have to rise above that--to regenerate."
--Kim Koster
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