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- <text id=89TT2934>
- <title>
- Nov. 06, 1989: Profile:Maya Lin
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- Nov. 06, 1989 The Big Break
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PROFILE, Page 90
- First She Looks Inward
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Architect Mqya Lin's Viet Nam memorial proved to be a powerful
- emotional reminder. Now she has created another
- </p>
- <p>By Jonathan Coleman
- </p>
- <p> Maya Lin was living on New York City's Lower East Side when
- she received a call from a man in Louisiana in late February
- 1988. Edward Ashworth, a member of the board of the Southern
- Poverty Law Center (SPLC) in Montgomery, said he was sorry to
- disturb her at home but hoped she would seriously consider the
- reason for his call: he wanted to know if she would be open to
- the idea of creating a memorial to those who had given their
- lives in the struggle for civil rights. Since she had designed
- the much celebrated Viet Nam Veterans Memorial, he was certain
- that she was the right, perhaps only, person to do this. As with
- Viet Nam, there had never been such a memorial.
- </p>
- <p> "I had told myself," Lin says, "that I was not going to
- design any more war memorials, but this wasn't that. The idea
- sounded interesting, and I told him that it would be fine to
- send me something."
- </p>
- <p> For Maya Lin, the process of creating the Civil Rights
- Memorial will not only culminate with its dedication in
- Montgomery this Sunday but will almost certainly thrust her,
- against her basic wish that her work speak for itself, into the
- public eye once more.
- </p>
- <p> Seven years have passed since the Viet Nam memorial was
- dedicated in Washington. Seven years since the heated, at times
- ugly, controversy that swirled around the design and its
- designer seemed to evaporate, in an instant, once the nation
- could witness for itself the overwhelming effect those two walls
- of polished black granite have on all who visit them, place
- flags and flowers beside them and touch the more than 58,000
- names inscribed on them.
- </p>
- <p> Lin's deceptively simple design -- entry No. 1,026 in a
- contest she never dreamed she would win -- had enabled America
- not only finally to confront the outcome of the Viet Nam War but
- also to begin the long process of healing. The memorial made it
- possible for the country to come together and honor those who
- had served -- those who had died and those who had come home to
- anything but a hero's welcome. Lin was proud of her achievement,
- yet disillusioned by the negative reactions her design had
- initially elicited ("a black gash of shame," to cite one), by
- the battles she had to wage to keep the "additions" of a flag
- and statue far away from the memorial, and by the fact that even
- her Chinese heritage was maligned. Young (she was a 21-year-old
- senior at Yale when her design was chosen), by her own admission
- naive, and secretly terrified that perhaps she had accomplished
- all she was going to accomplish, she left Washington with a
- brutal understanding of the incompatibility of politics and art.
- </p>
- <p> Her feeling of terror quickly passed. The short answer to
- the question "What ever happened to Maya Lin?" -- a question
- that makes her bristle -- is that she has been obsessively doing
- what she likes to do most: she has been working. But what she
- has done, she has done quietly, as is her nature, shirking the
- celebrity others might have embraced.
- </p>
- <p> "You really can't function as a celebrity," she says,
- sitting at her drafting table, where she likes to sketch and
- talk at the same time. "Entertainers are celebrities. I'm an
- architect, I'm an artist, I make things. I just love the fact
- that I can make a work and put it out there and walk away from
- it and then look at it like everyone else."
- </p>
- <p> Her enthusiasm for that work is infectious. In person, she
- is shy yet affable, serious but quick to smile, and full of
- energy; she doesn't so much walk as dart. Her private life,
- centered on a Bowery loft with the sculptor Peter Boynton and
- a cat named Sam, is something she guards fiercely. Her black
- hair, which once extended to her waist, has been cut short for
- quite some time, and her dark eyes draw you to her with their
- intensity. She dresses simply -- T-shirts and sneakers whenever
- possible -- is self-conscious about her youthful appearance (she
- turned 30 in October, and had looked forward to it for months)
- and prefers reading a Borges short story to anything that might
- be on television.
- </p>
- <p> As Lin grew up, one of the subjects she excelled in was
- mathematics. That skill not only led her toward architecture
- but also shapes her outlook on work. "If you present me with a
- problem, and if I like it and think I can work with it, I'll do
- it." That's an understatement. In point of fact, she finds
- herself driven to solve it, immediately.
- </p>
- <p> In the seven years since she left Washington, some of which
- she spent briefly at Harvard and then back at Yale, getting a
- master's, those "problems" have included the renovation of a
- Victorian house in Connecticut; the design of a stage set in
- Philadelphia; a corporate logo for financier Reginald Lewis; an
- open-air gathering place at Juniata College in Pennsylvania;
- and, soon, a "playful park" outside the Charlotte Coliseum in
- North Carolina (using trees shaped like spheres), and for the
- Long Island Rail Road section of New York's Pennsylvania
- Station, a glass-block ceiling, featuring fragmented, elliptical
- rings. In addition, there is her sculpture, which has been part
- of an exhibit at the Sidney Janis Gallery in New York City.
- Combining lead (which she loves for its malleability and its
- "seductive" quality) and broken safety glass, her pieces achieve
- her goal of being "beautiful but not pretty, strong and tough,
- yet not intimidating." They are very direct, in the same way she
- is.
- </p>
- <p> Even though this array of projects suggests an artist who
- refuses to specialize, who doesn't see limits, who, perhaps
- most important, doesn't want to be forever categorized as the
- "designer of the Viet Nam memorial," her approach to her work
- is intrinsically the same as it has always been. When she looks
- at a site, she says, she considers more than the mere
- physicality of it. She considers the "emotional and
- psychological context" of the place -- the people, the
- background, the history. Then there is the form itself.
- "Tactility," she says suddenly, with such emphasis that it
- suggests the essence of her perceptions. "Immediate sensations
- of material. Things are minimal in my vocabulary, so that means
- everything counts. Light counts. Sound counts. Height
- differences count.
- </p>
- <p> "You don't see a piece of sculpture without touching it,"
- she emphasizes. "When I taught a class at Phillips Exeter, I
- told my students to close their eyes and feel an object, feel
- its proportion. Then I would take it away and make them draw it.
- If you create something unusual, people will take the next step
- in."
- </p>
- <p> She pauses, seems lost in thought, then begins again,
- determined to make her point. "I just don't think we give
- enough credit to our public. The Viet Nam memorial was first
- seen as some sort of elitist statement. It's like you see it
- before you really see it. But if you don't have preconceived
- notions, the presence of the object will touch you in some way,
- and you'll be in dialogue with it. I mean, what do you do with
- people like Tom Wolfe? His fear of modern art is sad. He must
- have been flogged with a Brancusi somewhere along the way."
- </p>
- <p> Lin concedes that her artistic vision is "distinctly Asian"
- in its stark simplicity and virtual requirement to "look
- inward." If it, and her almost single-minded devotion to work,
- can be traced to anything, it is to the close-knit, ascetic
- world of her family. Her parents fled China just before the
- Communist takeover in 1949 and eventually settled in Athens,
- Ohio, where her father, a ceramicist, taught for many years at
- Ohio University, and where her mother, a poet, still does. Her
- older brother, Tan, is also a poet. Lin's family in China, which
- included an architect and a famous lawyer who worked for
- progressive causes, has been described in Jonathan Spence's The
- Gate of Heavenly Peace: The Chinese and Their Revolution,
- 1895-1980.
- </p>
- <p> Since she didn't date, didn't wear makeup (still doesn't)
- and took college classes while still in high school, she didn't
- have a typical American adolescence, but says she didn't care.
- From childhood on, she could go "for hours and days just playing
- by myself or reading," and recalls with pleasure how she would
- build little towns in her room or beg her father to let her
- throw a pot, or have spirited games of chess with Tan. "I find
- it very fun to be thinking all the time, figuring things out.
- I guess you could say I was somewhat of a nerd," she laughs.
- </p>
- <p> It wasn't until she arrived at Yale that she felt she
- belonged and that her creativity and diligence were fully
- appreciated. But something happened during her junior year in
- Denmark to mar that feeling of assimilation. She got on a bus
- in Copenhagen one day and became acutely aware that people moved
- away from her. It was the first time in her life that she felt
- discriminated against.
- </p>
- <p> In ways that he couldn't have fully imagined, Edward
- Ashworth found the right person to design the Civil Rights
- memorial.
- </p>
- <p> When she flew south to Montgomery, the "cradle of the
- Confederacy," in May 1988, Lin was excited but apprehensive.
- The material she had been sent from the law center included
- videotapes of the PBS series Eyes on the Prize, the book that
- complemented it and a short documentary on the Ku Klux Klan, one
- of the groups whose activities the SPLC monitors. Before
- receiving all this, Lin knew very little about the civil rights
- movement. She wasn't even born when Rosa Parks was arrested for
- refusing to give up her seat on a Montgomery bus in 1955, the
- arrest that led not only to a yearlong bus boycott but also to
- the "official" beginning of the nonviolent movement. The first
- thing she remembered, and not from the time it happened, was an
- image of Governor George Wallace looming in a doorway at the
- University of Alabama, unwilling to let any black student enter.
- The fact that she was neither a participant in the movement nor
- a well-versed student of it did not prevent her, as it did not
- prevent her with Viet Nam, from having an intuitive sense of
- what was needed.
- </p>
- <p> At lunch that day, all she could think about (and all
- Richard Cohen, the legal director of the center, could recall
- her talking about) was water. On the flight down, she was
- particularly struck by a line from Martin Luther King Jr.'s "I
- Have a Dream" speech, the line, partly borrowed from the Bible,
- that said, "We will not be satisfied until `justice rolls down
- like waters and righteousness like a mighty stream.'" It
- occurred to her that water would be an ideal element for a hot
- climate, that its calm, soothing quality and quiet, constant
- sound would be perfect for the "contemplative area" she wanted
- to create in front of the center, a place that would have all
- the tranquillity of a Japanese garden, a place "to appreciate
- how far the country has come in its quest for equality and to
- consider how far it has to go."
- </p>
- <p> What she showed Morris Dees, the SPLC's executive director,
- and Cohen that day, roughly sketched on a paper napkin, was a
- slightly curved black granite wall, 8 3/4 ft. high and 39 ft.
- long, that would bear part of the King passage. Above it, on
- what would be the upper plaza, water from a small pool would
- flow gently down the wall, gently enough that one could easily
- read the words. To the right of the wall would be a curved set
- of stairs.
- </p>
- <p> This, she said, was "the universal" element, and she would
- return with "the specific" to balance it. When she did, a few
- weeks later, she brought an un usual-looking model: an
- asymmetrical black granite disk that would be 11 1/2 ft. in
- diameter at the top but only 20 in. across its base, an object
- that from a distance would appear to be floating in air. It
- would be 2 1/2 ft. high and have water flowing evenly and slowly
- across its flat surface. Underneath the water, etched in the
- stone and looking like points of a sun dial, would be the words
- -- the names and the events -- that would tell the history of
- the civil rights era. They begin with 17 MAY 1954 SUPREME COURT
- OUTLAWS SCHOOL SEGREGATION IN BROWN VS. BOARD OF EDUCATION and
- end with 4 APR 1968 DR. MARTIN LUTHER KING JR. ASSASSINATED
- MEMPHIS, TN (there will be 53 entries in all, with a conspicuous
- space before Brown and after King, suggesting the struggle
- didn't begin with the Brown decision or end with King's death).
- Anyone, she said -- be it someone who had lived through the
- events or a child who had not -- could move around the piece,
- putting his hand through the water to touch the words or simply
- seeing his reflection in the water itself. And by doing so, the
- person could either remember, or learn for the first time, the
- history recorded there.
- </p>
- <p> "It's the kind of thing," Lin says, "that requires
- patience, awareness and added sensitivity. Architecture is like
- a mythical fantastic. It has to be experienced. It can't be
- described. We can draw it up and we can make models of it, but
- it can only be experienced as a complete whole. I wanted to put
- the truth down, just once. Placing it, just once." After all,
- she asks, "if you don't remember history accurately, how can you
- learn?"
- </p>
- <p> But in asking that seemingly simple question, she raises a
- complex issue that will surely not be resolved until the
- memorial is dedicated, if then: How will the South in general,
- and Montgomery in particular, feel about this tribute to a
- painful time? And will Maya Lin find herself and her work
- surrounded by controversy once more?
- </p>
- <p> "You put that memorial in front of your building, Bubba,
- and someone is bound to come over and tear it up," Dees was
- told earlier this year by Calvin Whitesell Sr., an attorney for
- the city during the Freedom Rides of 1961. "George Wallace once
- said to me," Whitesell recalls, "that the thing that always kept
- the South down was that the minute the South recovered from the
- Civil War, they started sending money to the North for bronze
- statues. We've got a bunch of them here, and I think you'll find
- that most people don't give a damn about memorials." He sees the
- real reason for the memorial this way: "A wonderful fund raiser
- for Morris. He came to Montgomery to do good, and he's done very
- well."
- </p>
- <p> Dees has heard all this before, and contends that there are
- people in Montgomery who will never forgive him for
- successfully filing suit to integrate the city's YMCAs. And
- while he doesn't rule out the possibility of vandalism (a 1983
- fire bombing forced the SPLC's move to its present location),
- he feels that anything like that would come from outside
- Montgomery. He feels that way primarily because he believes
- Montgomery has changed.
- </p>
- <p> "It's like a divorce," he says, sitting in his second-floor
- office from which can be seen, in the distance, the state
- capitol at whose steps the historic 1965 march from Selma ended
- and where the Confederate flag still flies. "For a long time you
- don't want to talk about it. But after a while the pain is gone;
- you're able to live with it, discuss it. I think the city is
- coming around to that now. Montgomery fought the movement at
- every turn, but I think it can be a very positive, cathartic
- thing for the city to face up to its past."
- </p>
- <p> One Montgomery resident who agrees with him is Robert
- Beasley, a black, 75-year-old retired high school principal
- whose only connection to the memorial is his fear -- his fear
- that without it "much of what happened -- the sacrifices that
- were made -- will be forgotten, unless we leave it in stone for
- generations to see."
- </p>
- <p> As Ken Upchurch, 33, a native of Montgomery whose firm is
- building the memorial, puts it, "If its purpose is to educate
- people, it's already worked with me. It's made me aware of a
- period that I might never have learned about."
- </p>
- <p> And Lin herself, he says, has helped him understand a
- design that he initially viewed as a contractor's night mare.
- Last April, Upchurch finally asked her what he had been meaning
- to ask for quite some time. He wanted to know how she had come
- up with it all, curious about the relation of the vast water
- wall to the low-lying table that will be in front of it,
- surrounded by a plaza of white granite.
- </p>
- <p> She spoke of aesthetic quality, of "dissimilar elements
- maintaining equilibrium." She spoke of shapes echoing one
- another, of objects and concepts coexisting in harmony. "Things
- can look different," she said softly, "but still be the same."
- </p>
- <p> She might have said people, but didn't. Ken Upchurch
- understood.
- </p>
- <p> For two weeks now, the memorial has been in place behind
- the white plywood walls on Washington Avenue. But Lin won't
- really know if what she envisioned truly works until someone,
- someone like Calvin Whitesell Sr., can experience it for
- himself.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-