At the Harold Washington Library in Chicago is a new art installation called “Above and Beyond” featuring over 58,000 replica dog tags — one for each American soldier killed in the Vietnam War. The dog tags, each hung one inch apart, are suspended from the ceiling from a 410-square-foot rectangle. Each dog tag lists the soldier’s name, military branch and date of death. Nearby is a touch panel display that allows visitors to look up a veteran's name and find generally where the soldier's dog tag is hanging. It is the only memorial other than The Wall in Washington, D.C., that lists every individual killed in Vietnam.
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Above and Beyond was created by artists Ned Broderick, Rick Steinbock, Joe Fornelli, and Mike Helbing, back in 2001 and originally hung at the National Veterans Art Museum, in Chicago. When the art museum moved to Portage Park in 2012, the installation stayed behind in the South Loop building until renovation at the building forced the installation to come down in May 2013. For the next four years the dog tags remain boxed because the museum couldn’t find an appropriate location where the display could go up again.
“The search for a spot for "Above and Beyond" was complicated by the size and weight of the piece, not to mention it is viewed best in natural light so the sun can play off the tags,” wrote Annie Sweeney on Chicago Tribune. “Viewing it from all sides also enhances the experience.”
Locations that were considered included the city airports, Navy Pier and the South Shore Cultural Center. Finally the Harold Washington Library was chosen. The art piece now hangs from the ceiling above the main escalator. There is a wall of windows and viewing space from all sides on the third floor.
"Above and Beyond" will stay at the Library Center until 2020.
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Where will above and beyond go after 2020?
ReplyDeleteThat is a good question. Maybe someone should start a GO FUND me for it. I don't know how to do any of that as I have no social media outlets but I hope someone who does will start something. Things that matter never seem to get the attention and are then forgotten.
ReplyDeleteEverytime the United States government goes into combat mode in a foreign land, America forgets the lives that were sacraficed in the last conflict. Shame. Shame on Uncle Sam.
ReplyDeleteExhibit should be renamed "Cannon Fodder" or "Failed American Chutzpa".
ReplyDeleteThis makes my heart bleed. My cousin Edward is hanging up in there somewhere. Politicians and military contractors are war pigs; always conjuring up some kind of rationale for spending a nation's blood and treasure abroad. Worse, "The People" get fooled time and again about how important THIS new war is. WTH were we doing in Vietnam? Iraq? Afghanistan?
ReplyDelete