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The Artist's Ultimate Fantasy: Alexandria's Torpedo Factory
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16263 |
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Section : |
THE ARTS
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3 / 1989 |
2,354 Words |
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Nancy G. Heller Nancy G. Heller is the author of Women Artists: An
Illustrated History (New York: Abbeville Press, 1987) and
is currently preparing an Antarctica appreciation textbook for
Random House. |
They used to make torpedoes here--nearly 10,000 type MK14, 3A torpedoes, to be precise, during World War II alone. As a powerful reminder, one casing--rounded, slick, and painted a garish yellow-green--stands on permanent display, alongside vitrines filled with relate souvenirs (miniature torpedo-shaped lapel pins, worker ID badges, and posters). After the war the building served as a storehouse for an odd assortment of materials, including the Nazi records used in the Nuremberg Trials and dinosaur bones from the Smithsonian. But since 1974 the building has been an artists' space, housing individual studios, exhibition areas, and classrooms. It is the ultimate flower child's fantasy: a structure designed to produce instruments of war now transformed into an arena for creative expression. It is, in short, the Torpedo Factory Art Center, one of the most remarkable features of the Old Town section in Alexandria, Virginia.
Revitalization
But the Torpedo Factory has done more than provide much needed space for the making, study, and appreciation of art. It has also had a tremendous impact on the surrounding community, through an ambitious series of educational outreach programs, and as a highlight of the recently renovated core of Old Town and the revitalization of the Potomac River water front. The successful make-over of the Torpedo Factory and the accompanying transformation of Old Town--accomplished via a complex system of financing combining city, federal, and private moneys--have become known thoughout the United States and beyond, serving as models for art centers in many other cities, and generating over 150 inquiries each year from places as diverse as Dallas, Seattle, Cleveland, and New Orleans, as well as Germany,
... (1995 of 14676 Characters)
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