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The Story of Water

The Erie Canal as a Site of Untold Stories

Project Description

Water. It's all about water.

What鈥檚 interesting about water is that it has no form, but it has the power to deform; water dissolves as much as it moves, 铿乴ls, and gives life. Such indeterminacy o铿ers the space for a meditation on how life and lives are formed, reformed, and even deformed over time. The waters of the Erie Canal moved goods, people, and therefore moved lives. But, as we know, the water didn鈥檛 move people in the same way at all times. Indigenous people, poor people, and even privileged people all felt the force of the water in di铿erent鈥攁nd disparate鈥攚ays, as the water formed, reformed, and deformed lives through work, trade, and displacement鈥 To think with the force of water, with the Erie Canal, is an invitation to tell a story about the cost of 鈥減rogress鈥 in central New York.  

While it鈥檚 about the water, it鈥檚 also about the lives shaped by the movement of the waters. Through these cast clay vessels we explore these marginalized histories that made the Canal possible. Formed from 3D scans of the canal locks, these vessels act as recording devices for the movement (and force) of the Erie Canal waters, forming and deforming the vessels. Their 铿乶al forms express the de- and re-formation inherent in the construction, maintenance, and usage of the Canal, symbolic of the losses that inevitably occurred alongside the 鈥減rogressive鈥 ingenuity and creativity that the Canal symbolized (and in some cases, still does symbolize).

Written by Linda Zhang.

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