| Young named to jury for planned WTC
memorial
By Patrick J. Callahan,
News Office staff
ames E. Young, professor of English and chair
of Judaic and Near Eastern Studies, has been named by the Lower
Manhattan Development Corporation (LMDC) as one of 13 members of
the jury that will evaluate and review entries in the International
World Trade Center Site Memorial Competition. Young is an internationally
known expert on memorial architecture.
Philanthropist
and businessman David Rockefeller will serve as an honorary jury
member.
The LMDC announced
the members of the jury April 10 and will hold a press conference
April 28 in New York City when guidelines for the competition will
be announced and registration will begin. The winning memorial design
will be announced in the fall of 2003. The design for a new World
Trade Center building complex by Daniel Libeskind was chosen earlier
this year.
Young says of his appointment
to the jury, "It's a great, if daunting honor, to be asked
to help choose how our city and nation will memorialize the destruction
of the World Trade Center towers and the unbearable loss of life
there. But if we see memory itself as a living, life-affirming process
that unfolds over time, then we might come to regard this memorial
as a stage in the process, not its last word. I begin only with
questions and look forward to seeing how our greatest artists and
architects might respond to them: How to remember and toward what
end? How will this memorial shape our understanding of these terrible
past events even as it invigorates future life in this city?"
Other members
of the jury are Maya Lin, architect for the Vietnam Veterans Memorial
in Washington, D.C.; Martin Puryear, artist and recipient of a MacArthur
"genius" grant in 1989; Lowery Stokes Sims, executive
director of the Studio Museum of Harlem; Vartan Gregorian, president
of the Carnegie Corporation and former president of the New York
Public Library and of Brown University; Paula Grant Berry, member
of the LMDC Families Advisory Council whose husband David was killed
in the south tower of the trade center; and Susan Freedman, president
of the Public Art Fund and director of the Museum of Modern Art.
Also, Julie Menin,
a downtown New York resident and owner of the Vine, a restaurant
in the financial district; Enrique Norten, founder of Taller de
Enrique Norten Arquitectos, a Mexican architecture firm, and professor
at the University of Pennsylvania; Nancy Rosen, advisor for the
New York State Council on the Arts and expert on public art; and
Michael Van Valkenberg, New York City landscape architect.
Two jury members
also were appointed representing New York Gov. George E. Pataki
and Mayor Michael Bloomberg. They are Patricia E. Harris, deputy
mayor for administration, and Michael McKeon, public relations executive
and former chief spokesman for the governor.
Young is a leading
authority on Holocaust memorialization, and was the only foreigner
and only Jew on the five-member panel appointed for Germany's national
Holocaust memorial. He recently authored the foreward for the catalog
of the controversial exhibit, "Mirroring Evil: Nazi Imagery/Recent
Art," at the Jewish Museum in New York. Young is the author
of At Memory's Edge: After-Images of the Holocaust in Contemporary
Art and Architecture (Yale University Press, 2000), and The Texture
of Memory (Yale University Press, 1993), which won the National
Jewish Book Award in 1994. He has been a member of the University's
faculty since 1988. |