A recent article by George Will of the Washington Post titled, “Reasons to Like (and honor) Ike,” caught my eye. Yes, I remember him when he was President Eisenhower, but don’t remember him when he was General Eisenhower!
Will’s article exposed me to the proposed memorial to Dwight D. Eisenhower by Frank Gehry to be placed near the National Mall in Washington. I also learned of a new biography by Jean Edward Smith, “Eisenhower in War and Peace.”
As it seems to be with many memorials, what Gehry proposes is not without controversy. Remember the Vietnam Memorial and more recently the Martin Luther King Memorial? And almost anything proposed in Washington these days is up for debate between Republicans, Democrats and undecided!
So what is the opposition? Will writes, “…the memorial will have a colonnade of huge limestone-clad columns from which will have 80-foot stainless-steel mesh ‘tapestries’ depicting the images of Eisenhower’s Kansas youth. And almost as an afterthought, there will be a statue of Eisenhower as a boy.” So far so good. I love Gehry’s building designs which seem like works of art to me. Several years ago I attended a concert by the Los Angeles Philharmonic at Disney Concert Hall in downtown Los Angeles. It is magnificent inside and out.
Members of the Eisenhower family seem to have many objections to the planned project including the background of the sculptor who will provide the statue of Eisenhower as a boy. And they question the endurance of the 80-foot stainless-steel mesh walls.
If you want to see a bigger-than-life-John Wayne memorial, visit the site of his birthplace in Denison, Texas. He was the first Texas-born president. The north Texas town of Denison takes pride in that fact and maintains his place of birth even today as a historical site complete with a life-size statue of him in military uniform on the grounds. Eisenhower’s father had come from Kansas to Texas to work for the railroad, but he moved his family back to Kansas when the future president was only eighteen months old.
We will have to wait for the recommendation of the oversight panel to see if Gehry’s design will be an acceptable memorial for a United States president and lives up to Gehry’s “architectural flamboyance” as George Will puts it. However, I have seen the statue in Dennison and that is good enough for me.
RELATED ARTICLES
http://philipkennicott.com/
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/culturemonster/2012/02/eisenhower-memorial-opponents-mccarthyite-attack.html
http://inhabitat.com/gehrys-eisenhower-memorial-for-washington-d-c-is-controversial-for-how-it-depicts-ike/
http://susaneisenhower.com/
http://www.washingtonian.com/blogarticles/22381.html
This is a really good post. I agree. The statue in Denison is good enough. It’s much more the kind of tribute I think he would have liked. Somehow, the idea of Eisehower and stainless steel just don’t “mesh”.
LikeLike
Thank you! From the sketches I have seen of the memorial, I really did not care for it either. And I don’t think Eisenhower would be especially impressed or think he needed another memorial.
LikeLike
It’s a very interesting topic and I’ll follow it to see how this controversy plays out. History is full of such issues. How to keep everyone happy? Impossible.
LikeLike
Yes, it is impossible to please everyone. I will follow it also, but with this year being an election year, I don’t think much will get done in Washington.
LikeLike
that disney concert hall looks like a mess. i’d expect better from them.
LikeLike
Yes, it is a bit unusual and maybe a mess, but it is a beautiful mess! It is quite an addition and improvement to downtown Los Angeles.
LikeLike
Pingback: Yes, I think Ike would like Frank! | THE COASTAL CRONE