American Dream Project: Writer’s Residency: Posts

ice harvests

cris cheek, Cleveland

Ice was harvested in Akron in the 1880s by ice farmers promising ‘a superior class’ of ice

A superior glass, stripped from ponds under contract to reap Summit Lake, White Pond, Black Pond and Crystal Lake

Once the ice got to be 8-10″ thick, blocks 22″ by 22″ were marked out by plow, cut and moved to storage in nearby ice houses by an endless chain conveyor, before becoming planed and stored. Ice cakes were packed onto a 2″ bed of wild hay or straw.

One American Dream is of ice automatically tumbling into one’s glass of water like there’s fever in the funk house now

Ice created in the house, not brought into the house

Ice harvesting paved the skids for the modern

But the increased population introduced germs and sewage one source into the ponds and lakes that were preserved in the ice served at the tables of those who could afford it

 

cris

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From a statement to a question

Justin Glanville, Cleveland

So far, it’s just an M.

But then that, too, goes away — hidden under a plastic bag atop a plain gray platform.

From beneath the bag escapes a wisp of vapor, evidence of the dry ice underneath that’s keeping the ‘M’ from melting. So far.

You see, the letters are ice. And in today’s 80 degree weather, they aren’t expected to last long. Maybe a few hours.

“It’ll spell ‘The American Dream,’” says Aaron Costic. He owns Elegant Ice, the local company that carved the letters based on a design by Brooklyn artist Marshall Reese.

Costic started working on the letters about three weeks ago. He says he’s excited to work on a project that features the “fourth dimension” of time. And he agrees with the concept of the piece, a statement on the ephemerality of our national ideal of prosperity for all.

“The gap between the wealthy and the lower-class just keeps getting wider,” he says.

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Aaron Costic, of Elegant Ice. The letters are still under wraps!

About 75 people gather on a lawn around the sculpture, their chatter rising in volume as the unveiling approaches.

There’s a countdown. “Five, four, three, two, one!”

The bags are removed, the ‘M’ returns. There it is, framed against Downtown Cleveland’s sky-piercing gray and brown towers, which might as well be shouting “Money!” In their shadows, delegates gather for the Republican National Convention.

The letters begin to drip immediately. People snap photos.

As I watch, I wonder: Is it the concept or the spectacle that’s stirring excitement? The mood overall is cheerful, chatty — not at all in keeping with the dark theme. Maybe it’s too dark to truly engage on such a beautiful blue-skied day.

It will be interesting to see if this changes as the letters melt. For now, they appear stable, whole. Times New Roman, 48 point, bold.

In a few hours, they’ll be hollowed out and dripping. Gothic or Zapf Dingbats — and perhaps looking more like question marks than letters.

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before the unveiling

cris cheek, Cleveland

THE AMERICAN DREAM

Has been stolen, used as evidence, abused, eviscerated, re-shot, frozen, blocked, manufactured, harvested, transported, designed, parked up, calibrated, polished, sat on its base, packed for shipping, wheeled out, reassembled into a meaningful phrase . . . reported on, shot from multiple angles, prepped for display . . .

 

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Polis is eyes

Up to 12 writers in each city have been invited to visit the site and stay for 2 hours.  LigoranoReese have asked them to share their thoughts about the disappearance of the American Dream. This part of the project stems from the idea that direct participation comes from active perception, apprehending the moment and leads to democratic action.

Commentary will be posted in realtime here on the meltedaway website and reblogged to ArtsEverywhere.

Poet and writer cris cheek is the Residency Coordinator. This part of the project is supported by the Musagetes Foundation.

Writers Cleveland

Mary Barrett, cris cheek, Carla Harryman, Justin Glanville, Daniel Gray-Kontar,
Janice A. Lowe, Julie Patton, Mary E. Weems

Writers Philadelphia

Josh Adler, cris cheek, Ryan Eckes, Knar Gavin, Anna Maria Hong,
Cyree Jarelle Johnson, Julia Lopez, Bob Perelman, Ariel Resnikoff, Frank Sherlock,
Kirwyn Sutherland, Orchid Tierney and others

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