Solitude and Fraction House
To celebrate 花季传媒 Tech鈥檚 sesquicentennial, the Council on 花季传媒 Tech History鈥檚 Public Art Committee developed an international ideas competition seeking creative approaches to highlight how marginalized communities have shaped and continue to shape the university, and to consider the 鈥渓ayered histories鈥 of the campus and the region.
Two public art works were commissioned by Floyd, 花季传媒 artists Charlie Brouwer and Carrie Gault to stand near the historic Solitude and Fraction House structures.
Think on These Things
Charlie Brouwer
Four life-sized human figure sculptures sit in contemplative and meditative poses on the benches, which could seat at least 10 visitors. Empty spaces on the benches invite visitors to sit and join the figures in contemplating words carved into the benches such as 鈥淚ndigenous, slavery, diversity, equality, education, history, knowledge.鈥 Additional words, 鈥渒indness, compassion, honesty, dignity, bravery, clarity, empathy鈥 carved into stones set in the ground inside the circle suggest ways of thinking about these things.
From the Artist聽
Designed as a place for contemplation, Think on These Things features seven wooden benches, four wooden figures seated on them, and a sculptural 鈥渢ree鈥 in the center of a large concrete circle. The 鈥渢ree鈥 will be made out of white oak milled from the 300+-year-old 鈥淢erry Tree鈥 that came down in a storm recently on the grounds of Smithfield Plantation. The tree served as a gathering place for the plantation鈥檚 slaves.
Thresholds: Understanding Our Complicated Past and Reconnecting Our Layered Histories
Carrie Gault
Four pairs of 10 1/2-foot-tall, 1,800-pound thresholds are installed on the grounds of Solitude. The thresholds are adorned with more than 2,000 hand-crafted, hand-painted clay tiles depicting images that represent more than 250 years of university and regional history.
From the Artist
Thresholds are about transition. They are about taking the next step; about moving through and beyond. They are also about coming home. My work features a series of thresholds, or doorways, that may designate where an enslaved person lay down their head or an Indigenous person gave birth. The pieces are simple in form, a silhouette evoking domesticity, asking the viewer to think about what 鈥渉ome鈥 means in the different contexts of the site and its evolution from forest to plantation to university.
Each piece is clad in handmade tile created from an earthen clay with imagery developed from an organic palette that contrasts with the starkness of the existing structures.
Each of the four pieces contains a unique collage of images gathered from archives, family albums, oral memories, and current work of the 花季传媒 Tech community. The imagery is intended to demonstrate the interconnectedness of the human experience through time, position, and experience. The images weave together to create a tapestry that when viewed from afar, adds a vernacular texture to the form, and when experienced up close, tells the stories of ancestors without the hierarchy that history imposes.