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9/11 museum’s major exhibition rife with reality

In one video clip, a young woman washes her fire chief father’s shirt — soiled from three days spent working in the smoking World Trade Center rubble.

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This piece of art, created by Manju Shandler and entitled “Gesture” is one piece of a 2,996-piece set of the larger work which is part of a special 15th anniversary exhibit at the 9/11 Memorial Museum. (AP Photo/ 9/11 Memorial Museum)

By Verena Dobnik
Associated Press

NEW YORK — To mark the 15th anniversary of the World Trade Center attacks, the 9/11 memorial museum is staging a major special exhibition that in some cases uses actual remnants of the day of terror in works that convey both grief and tenderness.

Brutal reality still dominates the display opening on Sept. 12. Scorched and torn business papers from the collapsing towers and radio transmissions from the fiery pit are part of the collection titled “Rendering the Unthinkable: Artists Respond to 9/11.”

Thirteen artists contributed paintings and a sculpture, as well as works on paper and video.

In one video clip, a young woman washes her fire chief father’s shirt — soiled from three days spent working in the smoking World Trade Center rubble.

Brooklyn resident Christopher Saucedo created his papier-mache artwork, “World Trade Center as a Cloud,” as a way to remember his firefighter brother, whose remains were never found.

Other artists lost friends or witnessed the attacks.

Monika Bravo, a native of Colombia living in Brooklyn, had filmed a thunderstorm passing over the city on Sept. 10, 2001, from her studio on the 92nd floor of the north tower. The footage is now condensed into a piece dedicated to a fellow artist who died a day later in the same tower.

“Through the lens of art, we reflect on the raw emotion we all felt on that unforgettable Tuesday morning 15 years ago,” said Alice Greenwald, the memorial museum’s director. The artists are not asking “that we revisit the horrors of that day but that we try to make sense of what was left in its wake.”

Along with human bodies that came tumbling down from windows outside the inferno were business communications with the world. A rumpled sheet in Japanese and an application for a marketing job written days before the Sept. 11 attacks — once just ordinary items — now reflect the “unthinkable” assault.

The papers, many in pieces, were blown out of the disintegrating skyscrapers and landed as far away as Brooklyn across the river. A soundtrack features recitations of various papers’ contents.

The exhibition was assembled by the National September 11 Memorial & Museum that oversees two reflecting pools bearing the names of the nearly 3,000 people who died on Sept. 11 in New York, Washington and Shanksville, Pennsylvania.

The display is the first in the museum’s special exhibition gallery where various 9/11-related topics are planned in the future.

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