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Architect
5th Avenue Theatre
April 14, 1997
Biography
Excerpt
Selected Works
Links
Biography
It's a blessing and burden when an artist's first commission is a project
of a lifetime that catapults her into the spotlight. Maya Lin was a 21-year-old
undergraduate at Yale University when her concept for the Vietnam Veterans
Memorial was selected by a blue-ribbon panel of architects and artists
from among 14,000-plus entries. Enrolled in a senior studio on funerary
architecture, Lin reflected long and deep on the meaning of a memorial
before arriving at her strikingly pure solution: a V-shaped slab of black
granite receding below grade and stretching widely in distant directions.
Inscribed on its reflective surface is a chronological roll of the American
war dead. Lin envisioned the memorial as a geode; she would open up the
earth and polish it. "It's a memorial that does not force or dictate
how you should think. It asks and provokes you to think whatever you should
think. In that sense it's very Eastern," commented Lin.
Though art critics were accurately predicting that the wall (dedicated
in 1982) would become one of the world's great war memorials, Lin's concept
unleashed a flurry of bitter protest from a faction denouncing the design
as a "black scar" and a "degrading ditch." Interior
Secretary James Watt nearly aborted the project, and Lin was under tremendous
pressure to capitulate to alteration schemes, which included changing
the stone to white, bringing it above ground, and planting a flagpole
at the V's vertex. Lin was unwavering in fending off such suggestions.
Ultimately, a compromise was struck, and a realistic bronze sculpture
of three soldiers was placed at the site's entrance.
Through no mere stroke of luck or industry did Lin produce a work so powerful
and appropriate. She was born in 1959 in Athens, Ohio, into a brilliant
and creative family, whose Chinese ancestors were accomplished literary,
artistic, and political figures. Lin's parents immigrated to the United
States in the late '40s. Professors at Ohio University, her mother taught
literature while her late father, a ceramist, was Dean of Fine Arts. Says
Lin, "When I was growing up there [Athens], there was a kind of American
arts and crafts movement going on, very clean, very simple, but with an
acknowledgment of artisans. My father made a lot of furniture in our house,
and all our professor friends were making things. That was definitely
an influence."
Lin works out of her home/studio loft in Manhattan (and also from a farmhouse
in Vermont), taking on a limited number of commissions. Her portfolio
is now filled with a range of successful sculptural and architectural
projects, including two other memorials, one (dedicated 1992) at Yale
University to commemorate the opening of the school to women in 1969,
and the other at the Southern Poverty Law Center in Montgomery, Alabama.
Here, her critically acclaimed Civil Rights Memorial (1989) interweaves
individual lives with the larger Movement. It consists of two main components:
A curtain of water flows down the face of a nine-foot-high, 40-foot-long
bowed stone wall, inscribed with the words "Until justice rolls down
like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream" (a biblical allusion
from Martin Luther King, Jr.'s 1963 "I have a dream" speech).
Adjacent to the wall is a low table whose elliptical top is bathed in
water; pivotal events of the Movement (from 1954 to 1968) and the names
of 40 who died in the struggle are incised into the stone.
To each project, Lin brings her intellect as well as her intuition. With
"Groundswell" (1993) at the Wexner Center for Arts in Columbus,
Ohio, she selectively spilled 43 tons of shattered safety glass in three
residual spaces of a Peter Eisenman-designed building, creating her version
of a Japanese Zen garden. "Eclipsed Time" (1994), a 14-foot-long
elliptical ceiling clock in New York City's Penn Station, offers frazzled
commuters a moment of visual relief.
Lin's reputation as an architect is emerging. Working with registered
architects (she has yet to sit for the boards), she has two residences
to her credit, as well as the renovation of a SoHo loft for Manhattan's
Museum for African Art (1993). Though Lin cites clear distinctions between
sculpture and architecture, her remarkable body of work is driven by knowledge
and passion for both disciplines.
Images taken of the Vietnam War Memorial (1982)



Selected
Works
The Vietnam Veterans Memorial, Washington, DC (1982)
The Civil Rights Memorial, Montgomery, AL (1989)
The Women's Table, Yale University (1992)
The Museum for African Art, (co-designer) SoHo, NYC (1993)
Eclipsed Time, Pennsylvania Station, NYC (1994)
Web
Site Links
Information
on the Vietnam Verterans Memorial
Interview
with Lin
Article
about Lin
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