Tuesday, May 7, 2013
Monday, May 6, 2013
What Happened to Maggie
Greensburg, May
4, 2007. Most of Greensburg was destroyed the night of May 4, similar to the
Udall tornado fifty years before. Thanks to an adequate warning system, the
death count was limited to 11. The town faced many dilemmas in the last three
years, including the option of going “green.” A TV series documented the
tornado, its aftermath, and the townspeople’s efforts to create a new
Greensburg on the ruins of the old. This tornado was a mile wide as it
flattened the town.
Maggie Poindexter
was one of the unfortunate ones that day. She wasn’t counted as one of the dead because
her body was never found.
Now I am a Harvard art student, my assignment in my
sculpture I class was to build 2 objects and present a 2 drawings/paintings of a tragic incident that happened in
our hometown.
I chose to build a metal tornado to signify the cold, ruthless power the twister has, and a clay replica of her car when it was found.
The supporting pieces I did was a scratchboard of her parents, who have never given up searching for her missing remains, and a painting of a local basketball goal that Maggie and I had worked on together in art class.
I chose to build a metal tornado to signify the cold, ruthless power the twister has, and a clay replica of her car when it was found.
The supporting pieces I did was a scratchboard of her parents, who have never given up searching for her missing remains, and a painting of a local basketball goal that Maggie and I had worked on together in art class.
Our old High School after the Tornado hit.
A family friend also captured the tornado on that devastating day.
For more information on what is happening to our town after the tornado, go to:
Our whole town is Going Green after the devastation.
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