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A woman weaving a tapestry, Paris, France, 1945
(via reddit)
Stories at the Crossroads: Who Built This City?
::LISTEN HERE::
What is an appropriate monument to our city today? This is a question that guides the work of Paper Monuments: a project described as a series of opportunities, events, and interventions designed to elevate the voices of the people of New Orleans, as a critical process to creating symbols of our city that represent our collective vision, and to honor the erased histories of the people, events, movements, and places that have made up the past 300 years as we look to the future. Through public pedagogy and participatory design, Paper Monuments is working to expand our collective understanding of New Orleans. On September 25th, 2017, community gathered together at the corner of Canal Street and Jefferson Davis Parkway for a Paper Monuments event called Stories at the Crossroads. The concrete base where the Jefferson Davis monument once stood transformed into a stage- rather, into a stoop- where storytellers, writers, poets, and historians voiced their own answers to the question rooting the Paper Monuments project: what is an appropriate monument to our city today? Mr. John Hankins, Director of the New Orleans Master Crafts Guild, answered the question with one of his own: who built our city- and even more- who built the monuments to our city? Amidst details on ironwork and ornamental plastering, Mr. Hankins lays out the story of Philip Reid, a masterful craftsman born into slavery in Charleston, South Carolina who worked on the Andrew Jackson bronze monument in Jackson square and the Statue of Freedom at the top of the U.S. Capitol Building in Washington D.C. An appropriate monument to the city, then, is one that honors those who really built it.
Stay engaged with the Paper Monuments project on their Facebook page
Learn more about their work from their website
Join in the conversation by giving your own answer to their question: What would be an appropriate monument to our city today?