ANNOUNCER: Live in downtown St. Louis with more on
our first story at six.
NEWSCASTER: Washington
University is sponsoring the event
called The St. Louis Projection.
In this case, the movie shows crime victims
and inmates sharing their stories,
showing only their hands.
The building representing
the other parts of the body.
KRZYSZTOF WODICZKO:
In St. Louis I turn to the
very beautifully designed building
of the central public library.
SPEAKER: Check, check, check.
SPEAKER: Yeah, that’s very nice.
WODICZKO: Inside the building,
participants were sitting
with cameras pointed on the person’s hands.
SPEAKER: Hi, my name is Diana.
SPEAKER: Hi Diana.
WODICZKO: Outside, it’s a kind of open mike.
Anybody can come forward to
speak back to the building
trying to prevent perpetuation of the murders,
killing, and gun violence in St. Louis.
This type of projection brings more opportunities
for more people to join each other
in an attempt to speak up and open up.
Open up and share in public space,
something that is usually
relegated to private domain.
SPEAKER: We never expect
to bury our grandchildren,
and when we do, it’s the most
horrible feeling in the world.
SPEAKER: And when I see
Riley’s two little children,
growing up, without their daddy,
it just breaks my heart.
SPEAKER: Yes.
When it’s your loved one, it’s not an easy thing.
You don’t forget.
SPEAKER: Now that it’s been a couple years,
how are you and your family handling birthdays,
holidays, family get-togethers?
SPEAKER: You always have that empty space,
but it never goes away
because there’s a hole in your
heart that nothing can ever fill it.
People don’t have a clue of how we feel,
because on the outside it looks like we’re okay,
but on the inside we’re
slowly in little bit every day
like we feel like we’re dying.
SPEAKER: This eternal flame burns
in memory of Christopher King,
age 20, murdered on August 26, 1986.
It burns in memory of J.A. King,
murdered on April 7, 1991, age 27.
It burns in memory of Adam Enis....
WODICZKO: The Revolutionary battle on Bunker Hill
somehow connected with the daily struggle of
Charlestown residents who are living
in the shadow of this monument.
Overlooking the area in which
on weekly or monthly basis
someone was murdered, killed.
So the battle perhaps continues
not that it should of course,
but unfortunately it does for life,
liberty and pursuit of happiness.
SPEAKER: When I was 17 my brother Kevin was found
hanging in a prison cell, Bridgewater.
The gangsters knew that he knew too much,
and I believe that they killed him.
It was made to look like a suicide.
And it was never investigated.
But everyone in the streets has
always told me that he was killed.
We no a lot more in the streets than we
tell the outside world or the police.
And everyone knows the truth
about things that go on.
But we just keep quiet.
WODICZKO: They eventually develop some
trust to break the code of silence.
To open up and speak about what’s unspeakable.
SPEAKER: I think a lot of you people wonder why…
why am I up here.
I’m no special person.
Just an ordinary person, just like you.
But all I can say is just
take a look at your family.
The ones that you love.
And what would you do if one
of them was taken from you?
How would you fight back?
Still try to have a heart that can still love,
and be a person that can care.
It’s not very easy.
My son, Adam, all I can say is that
I love you, and I will do my best.
And some day I’ll see you.
WODICZKO: I need to make sketches.
I need to make sure the body of
the speaker fits well the outline,
the character of the body of the monument.
So they both are integrated.
But I realize with time that
there must be another reason why
I’m preoccupying myself so
much with those drawings.
I need to keep certain
distance from what people say.
Somehow, the process of
making sketches keeps me sane.
Because I can not relive each time what I hear.
In case of anybody my position,
it will trigger my own experiences
or perhaps even trauma.
So I need to have something in between.
Something in between for them
is the camera and the monument,
and what it is for me, perhaps, the sketchbook.
I receive Hiroshima Art Prize,
the condition was that I will organize
retrospective exhibition of my work.
This gave me motivation to
do a large public project
in Hiroshima I propose a projection.
Which was to take place the night
after the anniversary of bombing.
My mother being a Jew whose entire family
was killed during ghetto uprising in Poland
gave birth to me in the midst of all of this,
my childhood was on the ruins of war.
Physical, political, and perhaps moral,
definitely psychological,
so I started working on my
projection with this assumption.
That we’re going to re-actualize one of
the few structures that survive bombing,
that is just underneath of
the epicenter of explosion.
To re-animate it with the voices and gestures of
present day inhabitants of
Hiroshima from various generations.
I started to talk to associations
of survivors of bombing.
I need to quickly develop some trust,
so they can really open up towards me.
Without developing of trust,
there is no possibility for my work.
The participants could not speak very long,
interrupted by their own tears.
SPEAKER (in Japanese): I saw many dead
or dying children. It was horrible.
WODICZKO: I seem to be working with people
who managed to survive,
and heal themselves to the point towards
reconnecting with society, with others.
Helping others to understand
at least a little bit,
a small part of what they went through.
To open up and share with
the world what is so painful.
The memorial should be a vehicle through which
the past and the future converge.
The river became a graveyard for both
people and buildings in Hiroshima.
As both a tragic witness but also
as a hope, because it’s moving.
There is new water coming.
Tijuana, it’s a border for many people
who came from poor provinces
who tried to advance their life moving north.
This building is a very important
symbolic structure in Tijuana.
It’s almost like a symbol of the city.
Landmark.
So here we have the kind of
variable television studio
with camera and lights and microphone,
to project the face with
precision onto the façade.
So the camera would be always in the same position
in relation to human head no matter
where this person is looking.
So the boundary between architecture
and projected body would be blurred.
The skin of the building
and the skin of the person
will be background and
foreground at the same time.
Will be shifting focus.
In Tijuana, ninety percent of
labor are young women, girls.
They work in ways that we don’t
even imagine some of them.
The issues that were brought were taboo,
were issues of incest, rape.
SPANISH SPEAKER: He closed the
door and then came into the room.
He grabbed me by force. He threw me on the bed.
He covered my mouth. I could not scream.
He abused me and he told me
that if I were to say anything,
he would hurt my family, my
grandmother, my mother, my uncles.
WODICZKO: I think that people were there to
support what they were hearing,
even if what they were hearing
and seeing was unbearable.
SPANISH SPEAKER: Sometimes I have nightmares.
That I am always there.
That I can’t do anything. That no one can help me.
WODICZKO: Sometimes it’s easier to be honest
speaking to thousands of people through monument
than to tell the truth at home,
to the closest person.
SPANISH SPEAKER: He hit us with the butt of his gun.
We saw Hector lying there
on the ground, all bloody.
We spoke to him but he didn’t answer.
Then we told Wendy’s mother
that they had taken her away.
She was found half-naked. The
doctor us she had been raped.
She lasted two months in a coma.
He had become a vegetable from
the blows he had received.