There have been many people in our past that we should be able to remember and know what they did, monuments have helped us to remember some of the great people in our country. Some of these people include George Washington, Abraham Lincoln, and Martin Luther King; people that have accomplished as much as they have deserve to be honored and should be given a monument in their name. There are several qualities that must be taken into consideration before a group puts up any sort of monument. Among these considerations are the accomplishments of the person whom the monument is being made after or the meaning of the monument, how the monument looks, and the audience's perception.
First, is the meaning of the monument and/or the accomplishments of the person in whom's honor it was made in. Monuments are meant to commemorate an event or person who had meaning in the society. One such example is a statue that was built of Abraham Lincoln and is now a very famous monument. This monument is so special because of the feeling it creates.This quote explains this special feeling, “Everything about the experience marks it as extraordinary and authoritative”(Source A). Another reason this monument is extraordinary is the uniqueness in how it was built. This can be explained by this quote, “...a colossal marble statue and the text of two speeches carved on enormous panels, all housed in a neoclassical temple...”(Source A). This gives the audience not just a statue to look at, but instead
Memorializing is often the way to remember a very important, intelligent, or rich person who lives above the rest of us. When we memorialize it sets a way to remember someone long after they have passed from life. More often than not those we put in statues and remember are those who change the world for the better or discover something new like Christopher Columbus, and his statue in Riverside Park (Deegan, Jim, source B). Lincoln's memorial isn’t where or had any importance to Lincoln, but it succeeds his most infamous speech he ever had “The Gettysburg Address” (Savage, source A). H. Elroy Johnson a famous lobster trapper, had a statue made but never finished during his lifetime, not until after his death, was the real statue made to memorialize him (Roadside America, source f).
There are many monuments in the world and they are all built to honor someone or something that was done by that person. For example, after the Maine Lobsterman was built, the fake bronze statue returned to Maine and spent several decades being moved from city hall to museum to museum. No one seemed to want the man and his lobster. The issue at hand is if the monuments being built are memorializing the person or moment created accurately. Monuments capture legacy and preserve the individual's actions throughout history. Specifically, monuments should consider purpose, location, and size in their creation.
From Trajan’s Column, completed in 113 AD, to the statue of Christopher Columbus in Easton, Pennsylvania, monuments and memorials have been a significant element of celebration and honor throughout history (Source B). Though monuments are typically meant as a symbol of honor, recent controversy over statues dedicated to Confederate leaders and generals has sparked the debate over how to choose subjects to memorialize, and the actual development of these memorials. When considering what or who to honor, one must also consider the subjects impact on history, ensuring that it is positive. In creating memorials and monuments, groups and agencies should examine the historical significance of the events or persons they wish to memorialize, and the
If pictures are worth one million words then a 3-d picture which is a monument is worth one million stories. The purpose of monuments is to tell a story about an events therefore crital thinking adn efforts are placed into making monuments. Depending on where the monuemnt is located and how it is built including its pose and the material it is made up of, it helps the audience live in that moment with the monuments,making the monument and the sudience one.
The monument that stand in my hometown is the soldiers and sailor monuments as tribute to the men in the Civil War from Athens, Ohio. The monument was built in 1963 for the 2,610 men who served for the Union from Athens County. The men went into battle for the defense of the Union. A lot of these men served in the 18th Ohio infantry. The veterans of the Civil War along with resident General Grosvenor set out to find funding for the monument. There were a lot of troubles in the beginning. The monument had failed to be erected previously because of placement issues. Where the monument stand now is in middle of Ohio University, and one of the question that arises when finding a proper place for the monument was is the University capable of maintaining this monument and whether or not it was a good location. Grosvenor led other residents from Athens to create the Athens Monument Association to fund the monument. And so the monument was then erected in 1963.
A monument is an solid, carved in statue that is an representation of a person or event that has made an remarkable time in the past. However, there are many different ways to remember a person or event. Memorializing an person or event is a great way to preserve history; because everyone agrees to enormous expensive statue is more entertaining than reading a boring textbook about the person or event. As a matter of fact, every person in American can not remember every person or event in history because there isn’t enough time and space for that. Therefore, a group or agency should consider the three main factors, size, location, and materials when planning or creating an memorial monument of an important person or event.
Is a good monument or memorial all about looks, or is it about the contextual meaning behind it. A monument’s size, location, materials and more are all considerations when planning and creating a memorial to the past. The audience of a monument/memorial site is not as important as it’s location and funding.
Perhaps the real problem is that monuments themselves may be an outdated concept. The world is changing so fast that trying to memorialize someone or some group is mute because there will always be another person or group coming after them doing something more. No matter where, how, or why you build it, time buffers people's’ feelings toward the
The responsibility of designing and building a monument is no small feat. After all, the end product is meant to memorialize important, and sometimes tragic events and/or people that have significantly contributed something to society. How does one begin to plan a memorial in the first place? Certainly, it can not be rushed, and can be a very grueling process. Several things need to be considered, including determining the proper location of a monument that suits the people who see it. One must also consider the intended audience and what the monument represents. Of course the simplicity or complexity of the monument structure must also be determined. Along with that, monument builders need to consider the positive and/or negative affects on people viewing the monument. In short, there are three main things that need to be considered when debating how, or even if, to make a monument.
The Monument Men of World War 2 thought of ingenious ways to save and preserve the art work, for instance they buried some rare books and art in a metal box in the ground. Even more amazing they saved the roof of the Sistine Chapel from a bombing run. First they took the roof down, and then they started to put scaffolding around it. Then they put rebar up, and then they poured the cement in, it created a concrete casing. Without them we wouldn’t have the Sistine chapel’s roof.
Thesis: What factors would you consider if you were contracted to memorialize an important event or person? Of course, there are many factors you would have to consider when creating such an important monument for an equally important subject. You would first have to do countless studies on what exactly it is you will be trying to represent so that the memorial can be created to have the representation its supposed to have. You will also have to pick the location where you will construct the monument the location is a vital part when trying to achieve symbolism for the memorial. Lastly, you mustn't downsize the monument and have great respect for it.
Monuments set boundaries around who or what should be remembered as significant, noble, and “accurate”. Just as elementary school curriculum codes shared definitions of normalcy, power, and modernity, monuments too are an important part of a manufactured public memory around which certain unquestioned realities are shaped. Their immensity and sterilized isolation of a single event or person can create an immutable singularity of narrative, particularly around events that might destabilize hegemonic narratives. In this way, monuments in America have been used to actively misinform the public, discourage citizen participation in public memory, and sustain colonial legacies while erasing many other marginalized
Many people enjoy monuments, but they are unaware of the controversial issue involved. Most agencies or groups have the right intentions of constructing a monument, but do not realize the public opinion of the case. Monuments intend to recognize a person, place, or event. When you think about a monument, you would most likely think about the memorial informing people of something significant in history. It is not the intention to bring the entire history lesson about the subject, but doing so would shame it. Although monuments are intentionally made in commemoration, some do not express the whole truth and some are absolutely meaningless.
In the modern world, monuments serve as a museum of art in town square, a mirror to the past. A Glimpse in which Chrisopher Colombus stands stoicly, in riverside park,easton pennsilvanya( Source B). A stone reminder, of those who served our country, and those who were lost in terrorist attacks and national tradgedies. These monuments do not simply appear however. They require a large group of people using a large variety of materials and combined knodlege to create something amazing.
Monuments are used to memorialize and honor moments, individuals and events of the past. Some monuments do this better than other monuments. In creating a monument there are three essential factors a group or agency should consider to make the monument as effective as possible: location, design features, purpose and backstory. Why these factors? Location and design factors play a massive role in the reception the monument will receive, based on its environment, size and looks a monument will be perceived differently. The purpose and backstory are the two single most important factors to consider in creating a monument. The monuments history, its reason, is the reason just? Is the purpose proper? Does it accurately memorialize the subject? All these questions come with the purpose and backstory of a monument.