This
post will wrap up an ongoing blog series that showcases the murals that
have been on display in our hostel this February in celebration of the
life and work of Martin Luther King, Jr. Student artists were
selected to create individual murals on the 2nd floor windows of
Hostelling International Chicago. The artists intalled their work
throughout the first two weeks of January. Here are the final two!
April Son, Zebadiah Arrington & Suhyung GoSchool of the Art Institute of Chicago
"We've
been kept inside of walls from fears that came when communication
failed. Looking through the windows, we've missed a lot of chances.
We've made enough mistakes every time we've tried to reach out further.
However,
the time to go out always comes back just like the hands on clocks
circle around. It's time to step back from the window and walk toward
the doors again. We believe this is the message through the history of
struggling for humanity, which Martin Luther King, Jr. also believed in.
Three
individuals stand together in front of Window to put this together
spontaneously for dreaming a perfection of communication. This piece is
inviting and welcoming the viewers not only to appreciate it, but also
to step back and look outside of the window. Black and White means a
fairness of the difference. Every individual is as important as the next
one. And everything has existed by sharing things, not dividing in
mathematics. The unify and connectivity of biological geometry that is
within all of us is a key symbol of understanding the equality for all."
"At
some point in life we decide what's next for us! For some, it's not
always a conscious choice. For others, it's not a choice that we make as
much as it is made for us. Yet still, for some it is written in the
stars for us and we simply do our best to live up to that.
For
Dr. King, his path was, we believe, both focused and incidental. You
see the picture of him during what I feel is in contemplation early in
his life. Possibly a moment when fate intervened and his destiny was
revealed to him? The yellow foot prints represent his fear of this dark
path, and that of those who knew and supported him. The process of not
knowing what is ahead of him, but knowing he must journey onward.
The
red foot prints represent his commitment and resolve to make this world
a better place for all and the price of his pursuit - his life. With
many threats to his life and that of his family and his friends being
murdered around him - he did not stop. Even in death.
Finally,
his journey culminates at his final and lasting resting place - hoping
that in death he can still impact life. And he has!
Many
people that we know can attest to the ideology of the title of the
window...the poor kid who makes it out of "the 'hood" to play pro-ball;
the driven student who makes it to Harvard to receive his new law
degree; the lost child who finds her fame and focus in front of an
audience that she connects with. Life is about our commitment to being
more, doing more, having more - it is about the journey. Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr.'s journey was to follow the path on which he believed
that GOD had placed him.
What
is your journey? Where will it lead you? Will it end at your death?
Focus, drive, commitment is what gets that one foot in front of the
other. Will it lead you to your destiny?"
We
hope you've enjoyed this series of posts about the murals, and that you
got a chance to come check out the murals in person for yourselves! For
more information about this competition, and if you'd be interested in
participating next year, please check out our website.
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