A new exhibit of photographs is on display at the Centers
Los Angeles exhibit hall, featuring images of the barricades
that now flank and encircle the monuments, museums, government
buildings, and other landmarks of the nations capitol.
The images, drawn from the CLUI Photographic Archive, are
all recent, taken mostly in late February of 2002.
The most public parts of the
city are completely transformed by the security measures
put in place after September 11th, which include miles of
highway barricades, heavy planters, steel fencing, and concrete
pipe sections, like those ringing the east side of the Capitol
building. The notion of a city that expresses the
openness of a publicly accessible government is severely
challenged by the defensive measures now in place,
said Sarah Simons of the CLUI, just returned from a recent
visit to the capitol. And those guys everywhere sitting
in idling official minivans and Ford Excursions all day,
watching, makes a visitor feel more and less secure simultaneously.
The barricades take many forms,
but the most prevalent are the concrete sections known as
Jersey barrier, which were originally designed
for use on highways. Around the Mall, these eight foot long,
free-standing impact deflectors are installed
in such quantity as to become an almost continuous, defensive
dashed line, allowing people through, but keeping errant
vehicles from being able to, for example, drive up the steps
into the Air and Space Museum. These measures are in place
indefinitely, according to officials, but are likely to
change into a more architecturally harmonious
form, as they become permanent fixtures in the plazas and
porticos of public space.
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The defensive dashed-line of Jersey barrier on the
Mall marches past government agency headquarters such
as the DOE...
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...monuments like the Lincoln Memorial...
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...and cultural institutions like the Hirshhorn Museum
and Sculpture Garden (next to which the barricades
gain a degree of sculptural integrity, perhaps).
CLUI photos
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The exhibit at CLUI, Los Angeles,
is on display until May, 2002.
Read more about this exhibit
in the Programs
& Projects section.