The World Trade Center Falling on Your Head Meme

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The sculpture you see below, believe it or not, was created to honor those that died in the World Trade Center airplane bombing on September 11, 2001.  The fact that many people leapt out of the burning buildings to escape the fire in the sky to quickly find their deaths on the ground below was lost on the artist.

The tasteless "piece of art" was quickly removed from public view and, we hope, found an early grave in the hard earth where it belongs.

We hope the "Falling on Your Head Meme" doesn't get a malicious propagation that will live in infamy -- but sometimes, revealing a known truth that is ugly and cruel -- can prove to quiet a future attempt at re-infecting the mainstream mindset.

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6 Comments

Even worse than I imagined! What was the artist thinking?

Gordon!

Yes, it is horrible, isn't it? I guess it was meant to honor the fallen -- who actually fell on their heads -- but it is just too real and too obnoxious and it creates just the opposite meme.

If I am remembering right -- it's been about seven years or so since that piece was uncovered, I think -- the artist was not American and it was sort of a sympathy gift... gone all wrong.

I'm not in favor of public censorship -- but I do feel the right thing was done in removing the sculpture. Too raw. Too soon. Not helpful to healing.

It's curious because you know there had to be a group of people involved in the approval, transportation and the display of the piece. What were they thinking?

Were they mindwashed by the overweening meme of the original inspiration and too fearful to speak up for good taste and manners?

Hi David!

What a ghastly way to honour and remember the victims of 9/11. I agree that it doesn't help healing.

Ghastly is a great word for it, Dananjay! I think the fact that it was unveiled for a public viewing confirms no one in the process of presenting the statue had any idea what really went on that day.

This is an extremely sad example of people trying to think "outside the box".

The entire concept seemed like celebrating the event instead of reflecting silently.

It does come off as a celebration instead of a mourning, Katha. It's just so wrong in every way and the disconnect is more important than the artwork.

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This page contains a single entry by David W. Boles published on December 4, 2008 5:26 PM.

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  • David W. Boles: It does come off as a celebration instead of a read more
  • Kathakali Chatterjee: This is an extremely sad example of people trying to read more
  • David W. Boles: Ghastly is a great word for it, Dananjay! I think read more
  • Dananjay Anandan: Hi David! What a ghastly way to honour and remember read more
  • David W. Boles: Gordon! Yes, it is horrible, isn't it? I guess it read more
  • Gordon Davidescu: Even worse than I imagined! What was the artist thinking? read more