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There is now a CONTENT FREEZE for Mercury while we switch to a new platform. It began on Friday, March 10 at 6pm and will end on Wednesday, March 15 at noon. No new content can be created during this time, but all material in the system as of the beginning of the freeze will be migrated to the new platform, including users and groups. Functionally the new site is identical to the old one. webteam@gatech.edu
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Join us March 10 at 6 p.m. EST for the Academy of Medicine Lecture on Classical Architecture presented by Dr. Perry Carter, associate professor of geography at Texas Tech University.
This event is free to attend. Please register to receive a link to the event.
Art Works: Presencing the Absent through Bearing Witness to the Annihilated at The National Memorial for Peace and Justice
This project concerns how memorial art objects radiate affective atmospheres and how these atmospheres touch and move audiences through their presencing of the dead. This presencing of the dead works to implicate audiences into bearing witnesses to atrocities that occurred in the long ago and the not so long ago. The mechanism for this type of moral witnessing, as MacDonald terms it, relies upon empathy as an unsettling affect. Empathy induces a channeling of the dead and an imagining of their deaths and of their truncated lives. Memory objects, and here aesthetic memory objects, act as agents of empathy. This project regards how these objects, these things, work upon audiences. Simply, the project is about the power of objects, the power of their spatial arrangements, and the power of the landscapes of memory which they constitute and by which they are constituted.
This project is framed in the work of Jill Bennett (2005) on affect, trauma, and art, and by the work of Gernot Böhme on the art of staging atmosphere. The project’s object of study is the National Memorial for Peace and Justice (NMPJ). Opened in 2018, the NMPJ (commonly referred to as the National Lynching Memorial) is the brainchild of Bryan Stevenson, founder and executive director of the Equal Justice Initiative. The primary ambition of this project is to gain an understanding of how the aesthetic affective materiality of the NMPJ works to create moral witnesses.
Bennett, Jill (2005). Empathic vision: Affect, trauma, and contemporary art. Stanford University Press.
Böhme, Gernot (2013). The art of the stage set as a paradigm for an aesthetics of atmospheres. Ambiances. Environnement sensible, architecture et espace urbain.
Macdonald, Sharon (2010). Difficult heritage: Negotiating the Nazi past in Nuremberg and beyond. Routledge.