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It's naked, it's brutal, it's who we areSubmitted by Norm Roulet on September 20, 2006 - 9:08pm.
As I looked through the locked door of the Edgewater Deli, a few hours after Salim Alsoliman, 54, was gunned down there, I thought of the "Andy Warhol - Supernova: Stars, Deaths and Disasters" exhibit I'd seen at the Art Gallery of Ontario, in Toronto, earlier that same afternoon. Andy stated, about his Death and Disaster series of paintings, one of which is detailed above, "I thought it would be nice for these unknown people to be remembered by people who wouldn't otherwise think about them." From the Warhol experience, I realized few people in NEO would think about Mr. Alsoliman's death for more than their 15 seconds of reading or watching the news about this shooting, and even then they would not really think about Mr. Alsoliman... yet there his blood still lay wet on the ground.
An article titled "Andy Warhol: Pope of Pop" writes of the Death and Disaster Series: " The heavily manipulated photographs, repeated over and over again, imply through their multiplicity that society is merely a silent witness to everyday horrors and that death, is simply another aspect of life to be reckoned with." The first in the series, titled Tunafish Disaster, 1963, described and detailed below, has unique significance today, as an Ohio child apparently just died of eating contaminated organic spinach.
Seeing the Warhol exhibit had a profound impact on me, as I thought of the human experience in American society today, how far people are isolated from brutal reality, and how easily people ignore tragedy as a result. While we are bombarded by fantasized depictions of death and mayhem in fictionalized media, real life media does not expose people to the brutality of man against man. We do not see the blood and pain caused by the drunk drivers who daily kill innocent people, and so are not outraged enough. We do not see the pain of the homeless and so are not outraged enough. We do not see the blood of murder victims and so are not outraged enough. And we do not see the mayhem of war and so are not outraged enough by that.
Andy Warhol's Death and Disaster series disturbed viewers in 1963, and would disturb viewers now, if people were exposed to such honesty today. I believe people being disturbed by the problems in society is part of solving our problems with society - we must convert people from viewers of entertaining 15 second sound-clips to where they observe, experience and care about things that truly matter, as part of their everyday lives, at least for 15 minutes, here and there. We have not yet caught the killers of Salim Alsoliman, and the media is not telling us the victim's life story or making us care about him or his murder at all. So we will not be surprised by the next murder, or drunk-driving killer, or war, as they are all just a series of desensitized 15 second soundbites... entertainment in this post-pop surreal time of the second coming of a Norman Rockwell America of dreamy dreams. For a healthy dose of reality, make a quick trip to Toronto and see Warhol's death and disasters, and then think of ours.
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