How do you decide what to include in the mural?
This
is one of the most common questions (and one of the toughest to answer)
I get when beginning a new project. The flip-side question, how do you
decide what to leave out? is easier to answer because, put bluntly, the
answer is that most things are left out.
At
one of our first community meetings, with hundreds of possible ideas on
the table and no clear way to make them all fit together, I reminded
participants that this was only one mural. If we wanted to create a
visually compelling and meaningful artwork and not just a simple
enumeration of things, the bulk of historical facts and faces, dates and
places would need to be left on the cutting-room floor. Collaboration
implies compromise.
Working
to evoke the history, culture, and people of a place with any sort of
objective truth in a public art work is a daunting task. As you begin to
do research, it becomes clear that perceptions of history, culture, and
development are rarely static or monolithic. Every place and every
community of people has many overlapping notions about their history and
community, many of which are in flux as economic, political, and
demographic circumstances change.
Our design team meetings have reflected this complicated understanding of the past, as if history were constructed of hundreds of
photos of the same scene from hundreds of individual points of view.
Like a cubist painting by Picasso where fruits, faces, chairs and tables
are depicted simultaneously from straight-on, profile, above and below
in the same image, or a popular song that is interpreted first by an
opera singer, next by a rock -n- roller, and finally by a bluegrass
troubadour, meanings change depending on the singer, painter, or teller
of a story.
Listening
to such a wide range of points of view about essentially the same set
of facts, we began to realize that the overlapping of history and
complex multifaceted understanding of Newton’s identity, discussed in
our community meetings, corresponded to the dynamic nature of a place at
a nexus or crossroads. And because Newton is and always has been a
place of crossroads, cross-currents, and cross-pollination, we felt like
we had found a potential theme for the mural.
Newton's
identity is grounded in its location as a geographic, economic, and
cultural intersection. Early in its history, during the cattle drives of
the 19th century, Newton was where the Chisholm Trail and the Atchison,
Topeka, and Santa Fe railway crossed. Later it became the intersection
of two of the most important auto routes in North America: the Meridian
Highway (U.S. Route 81) which runs south from Winnipeg, Manitoba Canada
through Newton to Mexico City, Mexico and on into Central America; and
U.S. Route 50, better known as Main Street USA, which begins in
Washington, D.C. goes right through Newton and ends in Sacramento,
California. And throughout its history, Newton has been a locus of
cultural and ethnic integration welcoming immigrants from around the
world, especially Mennonites from Russia and Hispanics mainly from
Mexico.
Our
challenge has been to find a way to elaborate on the raw information of
these crossings, framing them within visual metaphors that can
hopefully get at the spirit or essence of the Newton /North Newton
community.
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