Feeling New York
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Suzie Harrison
He saw it happen firsthand. Later that day, with the sight forever
burnt in his memory, he sat in front of his computer and posted his
writings of what he experienced on Sept. 11, 2001. He wrote from his
home in Brooklyn Heights, directly across from where the World Trade
Center had been when he woke up that morning.
Now living in Laguna Beach, photographer Gerard Van der Leun will
share his chronicles of experiencing towers’ demise in an exhibit at
Harlow’s Fine Art. The show will open Feb. 29.
“New York Life: Images After the Fall” is another extension of Van
der Leun’s media experience -- as a career writer, editor and
publisher, this visual journey is something he said he needed to do
for himself and the city he loved and lived in for 30 years.
The transcripts are chilling.
“There is no more World Trade Center visible form the Promenade,”
Van der Leun said. “But you can smell it from there -- a sort of
burnt stench as if someone lit newspaper in a trash can and then
poured water on it. That kind of wet burnt stench.”
After 9/11, Van der Leun said he became obsessed with documenting
New York, exploring the city as he had never done. The result
consists of more than 200 images and includes the words taken from
his journals and notes -- pages of thoughts.
“This project is taken from 10,000 photos taken in 2002,” Van der
Leun said. “I kept about 3,000, the rest I destroyed. I just scrapped
them. One secret of photography is to take a lot of pictures and
throw most away.”
It’s the antithesis of snapshots for personal use, he said, when
only a few are thrown away.
“The show has two elements, first the New York that I saw when I
walked through it,” Van der Leun said. “I basically decided somewhere
in the months following 9/11 I sort of knew I was leaving New York.
But when you leave something that’s been important, you usually end
up with shoe boxes of photos, a private celebration.”
Almost every day he would take the subway, start a walk and take
pictures of what he ran across on the way.
“That was my discovery, what emerges is a record of how the city
looked how people dress, expressions, signs in that first year [after
9/11] that time frame ending Sept. 11. 2002,” Van der Leun said.
The other part of his show is really a collage of a mythical city.
He used Photoshop to create a dream city.
“It’s sort of strange, really different,” Van der Leun said. “When
you stand on the edge of a view a half-mile away and watch three
thousand fellow citizens turned into ash -- reality cracks upon its
edge. If you weren’t there to see with [your] own eyes it’s hard to
explain the transformation of events beyond fear, anger, terror and
standard emotions.”
He said to see it happening in front of him in that instant it’s a
transformation of the most fundamental levels.
Gallery owner Ashley LaJune said she is looking forward to this
exhibit and feels it’s a great change of pace for Laguna galleries.
“Last 9/11, I had a day of remembrance, a celebration of life,”
LaJune said.
She thought it would be special to have a day to remember at a
time not expected and decided to open his exhibit as a tribute on
Leap Day.
“New York is such a juxtaposition town there’s so much information
in a 16th of a second,” Van der Leun said.
“New York Life: Images After the Fall” will open with an artist’s
reception from noon to 4 p.m. Feb. 29. Harlow’s Fine Art is at 332
Forest Ave., Suite 7. For more information, call (949) 376-6075 or to
access Van Der Leun’s website go to https://www.newyorklife
images.com.
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