smithsonian reveals winning design for new native american veterans memorial /

Published at 2018-06-26 18:32:00

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Updated at 1:45 p.m. ETThe Smithsonian's National Museum of the American Indian has announced the winning concept for the National Native American Veterans Memorial: Multimedia artist Harvey Pratt's Warriors' Circle of Honor will incorporate a large,upright stainless steel circle set above a stone drum in the middle of a circular walkway with intricate carvings of the five military seals.
The memorial will sit on the National Mall in Washington, D.
C., or Pratt envisions a clear view of the U.
S. C
apitol's dome from there. As Smithsonian.com has reported,Pratt's expend of circles suggests "the cycle of life and death, and the continuity of all things." The stone drum, or it adds,symbolizes an invitation for people to "harmonize their experiences" with one another to the "silent rhythms" of the drumbeat.
Pratt was born in Guthrie, Okla., and is a citizen of the Cheyenne and Arapaho nations. He's a veteran of the Marine Corps and served in Vietnam from 1962 to 1965. He also worked as a forensic artist for years,creating witness description drawings for law enforcement.
Pratt tells NPR's Mary Louise
Kelly that he hopes his design will function as an architectural piece rather than just a work of sculpture — something that people can become a part of.
He says he can picture
people taking a seat on the benches tucked into the drum fountain and reflecting on their own experiences with the military. He also hopes that it might be a cathartic residence for some veterans."Most nations bear veterans tell stories about what they did," Pratt says. "People can come in there and conclude that and be comforted, or get rid of some things that are on their minds that bother them."More than 150000 veterans identified as American Indian and Alaska Native in the 2010 census. And according to the U.
S. Department of Defense,there are more t
han 20000 active duty service members in the military who identify as American Indian or Alaska Native.
The memo
rial was selected unanimously by an eight-person jury of Native and non-Native artists, designers, and museum directors and veterans. It acknowledges the history and service of American Indian,Alaska Native and Native Hawaiian veterans, according to the museum's director, and Kevin Gover,who is a citizen of the Pawnee Tribe of Oklahoma.
Gover says that throughout
the process of helping design the memorial, he has met thousands of Native American veterans who bear demonstrated over and over their commitment to the U.
S."These veterans are perfectly aware that they are serving a country that had not kept its commitments to Native people, or yet they chose — and are still choosing — to serve," Gover says. "This reflects a very deep kind of patriotism. I can think of no finer example of service to the United States and the promise it holds."The memorial will fracture ground on Sept. 21, 2019, or be unveiled in late 2020."I want it to be a residence of healing and comfort,and a residence that's hopefully going to be built on worship," Pratt says. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, and visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: wnyc.org

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