September 11, 2004
1000 OR SO WORDS ON 9/11
Higher, please.
* * *
This picture is an original work of art by Bryan Larsen, which I found pre-9/11/01 at the Quent Cordair Art Gallery site. It fascinated me enough to bookmark it then, and I've viewed it many times since. Both professional quality and poster prints of this image are available via the Quent Cordair site.
The following text appears at the first link:
The following letter was written by Quent Cordair on Friday, September, 14, 2001, to our mailing list:Dear friends, family and associates,
As a former U.S. Marine, I once carried a rifle in our defense. I've two younger brothers in the military who now stand ready to cover that end of things. The firemen, doctors, rescue personnel, blood donors, the brave New Yorkers and others on the scene are giving what they have to give to the effort. Philosophers are fighting with the pen. The artists' tools are uniquely valuable as well.
As a gallery owner, I offer what I have -- a single image to inspire, to counter the endless images of the destruction which we've all endured over the past days. This image stands in lucid contrast, in defiance of those who would destroy. It is a re-affirmation of who we are, of what we've created, of what we've built, of what we will rebuild and build higher yet, with unthwarted and unconquered determination. Those who would destroy us have not touched our essence.
My thanks to the artist, Bryan Larsen, who during the months in which others were plotting to destroy the World Trade Center, was busy creating, featuring the towers in an artwork which identifies and celebrates in theme all the towers stood for. The creation of this painting while others were targeting the painting's subject for destruction was no coincidence; there is no irony in the timing. Each side identified the WTC as a vital symbol of America in these times; one side sought to destroy that value, the other to celebrate it and build on it. In retrospect, the artwork stands in memorial. The World Trade Center was not fully appreciated, by many, until it was gone.
May this image serve as inspiration as we recover and look to the future. Please feel welcome to share it with all, to remind ourselves, and the world, of who we are, undaunted and unbeaten. God bless America, those who built it, those who will build again, and higher.
Quent Cordair
Again, I say...
Higher, please.
ยป Haggis ain't Cake! links with: THE DAY EVIL TRIED TO BREAK US
Excerpt: It came to our land of freedom It lived among our posterity Waited in hatred and ill-will enjoying our hospitality Unleashed all that it knew and the only thing it could muster Hurt us and made us cry Now aware...
Weblog: Haggis ain't Cake!
Tracked: September 11, 2004 03:09 PM
Yes..build it higher, bigger, stronger.
Like the six million dollar man, the towers have to rise again.
I've always loved this piece, since I first saw it also (prior to 9/11)
I hadn't seen his letter - thank you for bringing that out.
We shall never forget
Nice art, but too gay for my living room. I'd buy it for my gay brother, but he never likes anything I buy. Says it's all "too straight".
Jess - Less gay item from the gallery:
http://www.cordair.com/mack/casual.aspx














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