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Michelle @trailtotoday.bsky.social

Irish Hunger Memorial, NYC for #BlueskyMonday and today’s #AbstractAug theme: #Celtic It was designed to raise public awareness of the events that led to the famine of 1845-52 and to encourage efforts to address current and future hunger worldwide. #EastCoastKin #MobilePhotography #NYCPhotography

Central to Tolle’s project is an authentic Famine-era cottage donated to the Memorial by his extended family, the Slacks of Attymass, County Mayo, Ireland. The cottage has been painstakingly reconstructed on the Memorial’s halfacre site as an expression of solidarity to those who left from those who stayed behind. One and a half million Irish were lost through famine related death & the Diaspora. The design expresses a desire to react & respond to changing world events without losing its focus on the project’s commemorative intent. From the cottage, visitors to the Memorial meander along paths winding through a rugged landscape thickly planted with native Irish flora-plants often found growing in fallow fields. Ascending to an overlook twenty-five feet above the ground, the visitor confronts a breath-taking view of the Statue of Liberty & Ellis Island beyond. This landscape is cantilevered over a stratified base of glass and fossilized Irish limestone, presenting a theater of historical and modern sentiments about famine worldwide. Layers of mutable text, appearing beyond touch as shadows upon the glass, wrap around the exterior of the Memorial and into the passageway leading to the cottage while accounts of world hunger are heard from an audio installation overhead. Brian Tolle is an internationally renowned sculptor and public artist. His recent public works include Waylay for the Whitney Biennel in Central Park, New York (2002), Man’s Achievements on a Shrinking Globe in an Expanding Universe for the Queens Museum of Art, New York (2001) and WitchCatcher at MetroTech Center Brooklyn, New York (1997) reinstalled in New York City Hall Park, New York (2003). Using a variety of media, Tolle’s works draw themes from the scale and experience of their surroundings provoking a re-reading by cross-wiring reality and fiction. In much of Brian Tolle’s work he uses cutting-edge technology in unexpected ways, blurring the border between the contemporary and the historical. The Freedom Tower is set behind the stones of the memorial against a blue sky. https://bpca.ny.gov/place/irish-hunger-memorial/
aug 12, 2025, 1:37 am • 27 1

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Steve @laskevitch.com

A place we will go when we visit this fall. Thanks for posting this!

aug 12, 2025, 3:03 am • 0 0 • view
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Michelle @trailtotoday.bsky.social

It’s small but interesting. I went with a tour guide, you may be able to go without paying for that. bpca.ny.gov/place/irish-... and while you’re downtown you could go to the 9/11 memorial museum if interested.

aug 12, 2025, 10:35 am • 0 0 • view
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Steve @laskevitch.com

It looks to be a thoughtful and lovely experience. Thanks for the tip!

aug 12, 2025, 7:33 pm • 2 0 • view