"There is nothing more pleasant than cruising on a boat with the whole family."
Letter from Empress Catherine the Great

Sunday, November 22, 2020

REVERBERATIONS


So what is art doing in a sailing blog, one might ask. Reverberations is an art installation -- five bells strung  along the 200 yards or so on the East side seawall of the East River, at Brooklyn Bridge Park, opposite the South Street Seaport. Its proximity to salt water suggests the sea as does the color of the bells: international orange -- the color of life jackets so those in the water can be picked out  visually amidst the sea of blue, green, grey and white so they can be plucked out of the sea. The light spot on the bell occurred because two holes, on opposite sides of the bell, are lined up to the camera.

I attended a free Zoom interview of the artist presented by the Cooper Union, and then visited the installation the next day, a short round-trip subway ride to the first stop on Brooklyn.

Each of the five bells in the installation is identical in size, shape and color but their holes are drilled in different patterns, which the artist says give each bell a distinct tone, though my tin ears were unable to distinguish the differences. 

Each is in the shape of a parabola and cast in bronze by the ancient "lost wax" method. Then top and bottom are welded together, the weld smoothed, the holes are drilled and they are painted their distinctive color. Their clappers (seen in the bottom of the bell in the top photo) can be pulled via the chain by any passer by and their size can be seen in the next picture (with he Brooklyn Bridge behind)  by comparison to me, at 6' 2", pulling the chain.

The questions at the interview focused on the art, e.g., comparing the artist's work to that of other artists who have featured bells in their work and may have influenced her. My interest was more in their nautical imagery. For example, their shape and color is closer to the form of a buoy than a traditional church bell. And their clappers looked like those on bell buoys that chime 24/7 when the buoys are jarred by waves to ring out danger to mariners. There are several buoys in the waters of the east river, red or green to mark the sides of the deep channel. 

The bells are said to sound  a warning about the ravages that climate change is doing to the world, which reminded me of another warning bell in a different city we have sailed to and moored in. The good citizens of New Bedford Massachusetts rand a freedom bell to  warn its residents  of color to hide when runaway slave catchers were seen approaching that whaling town.

The final photo in this post is of a plaque providing further information about the artist and the subject. Sadly the installation is scheduled to be removed in mid April, making it unlikely that I will be able to il past the installation.

I have also had to sadly advise our Commodore that the Club's mostly annual Winter Land Cruisewill be yet another victim of Covis 19. Each year we go to an interesting nautical-related place with fellowship and followed by lunch and with a small fundraising component. Not in 2021.




 

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