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Waiting until death to escape our containers

David Maisel: The Library of Dust

“What happens to our bodies when we die? Inside a dusty room in a decaying outbuilding on the grounds of a state-run psychiatric hospital are simple pine shelves lined three-deep with thousands of copper canisters. The canisters hold the cremated remains of mental patients who died at the hospital from 1883 (the year the hospital was opened, when it was known as the Oregon State Insane Asylum) to the 1970’s, and whose bodies remained unclaimed by their families. The copper canisters have a handmade quality; they are at turns burnished or dull; corrosion blooms wildly from the seams of many of the cans…The intensely hued colors of the blooming minerals, the etching of the surface of the copper, the denting of the metal, and in some cases, the vestiges of paper labels with the names of the dead, all combine to individuate the canisters, and to imbue each with a remarkable singularity…”

And don’t miss Geoff’s excellent interview with the artist about this and other projects.

See also: David Maisel’s Unraveling Smithson: Some Thoughts and Considerations Regarding Robert Smithson’s Art and Writings and Their Effect and Influence on My Own Art Practice (pdf)