| Stone
Songs on the Trail of Tears
The Journey of an Installation
Pat
Musick, with Jerry Carr and Bill Woodiel
Essays by Donald Harington and Jack Baker
A
poignant art installation captures an important and tragic
moment of Native American history
In
March 2002, artist Pat Musick, her husband, Jerry Carr, and
historian Bill Woodiel set out to commemorate a portion of
the great and tragic Trail of Tears. On the Trail of Tears,
the Cherokees, among other American Indian tribes, were forced
to migrate westward, leaving their homelands for the unknown.
Following the tradition of Christo, and inspired by installation
artist Andy Goldsworthy, Musick and crew created an art installation
titled Stone Songs on the Trail of Tears. This book chronicles
the journey, with photographs, poetry, maps, journal entries,
and introductory essays on art and history.
It is an eye-catching piece of art featuring five yokes that
combines oak, wood, steel, and native Ozark sandstone, designed
to represent the struggle of those who took the brutal journey.
The installation traveled to twenty-two stops along the Benge
Route across northern Arkansas, the actual route taken by
some of the Cherokees in 1838. Musick and her crew moved the
installation to each spot along the Trail of Tears; sometimes
using the wagon ruts or other physical remains still present
to guide their way. Time was spent in each area, meeting locals,
setting up, photographing, and moving on, as ephemeral as
the Cherokee’s journey itself.
According to Musick, “The project became much more than
any of us expected. About the second day the sculpture took
on a life of its own, and we viewed it as ‘moving’
through the trail sites. Each of us experienced poignant identification
with the tragic history of ‘the People.’
We felt that ‘Nunahi-Duna-Dlo-Hilu-I,’ the ‘place
where they cried’ had changed our lives forever.”
Each photograph is accompanied by a poem written by Musick
in the voice of a young Cherokee mother making the journey.
Stone
Songs on the Trail of Tears: The Journey of an Installation
is a beautiful and powerful portrayal of the strength, courage,
and perseverance of the Cherokee people. It is more than just
a book; it has become a documentary piece of history. Donald
Harington, noted author and University of Arkansas professor
of fine arts, contributes an introductory essay, as do historian
Bill Woodiel and Jack Baker, president of the National Trail
of Tears Association.
From
the introductory essay by Donald Harington to Stone Songs
on the Trail of Tears:
“Sculpture
is usually thought of as fixed, stationary, monumental. But
Pat Musick’s refuses to remain stationary. It moves.
It moves not alone through the landscape of Arkansas, but
through the uncharted dreamscapes of our mind.”
“Artist
Pat Musick has found inspiration and opportunity for great
art in what has been recorded only in legendary accounts of
the Cherokee Trail of Tears. Pat Musick’s sculpture
and Jerry Carr’s photographs have recorded routes and
places that give a unique ‘thereness’ to this
tragic bit of American History.”
—Charles
Banks Wilson, Oklahoma artist, portrayer of the Western and
Plains Indians
“The
Trail of Tears sculpture represents the suffering and the
agony of the Cherokee people as they were removed from their
Eastern homelands. The story reflected in the sculpture warns
the American public that a nation founded on the principles
of equality can fall prey to greed and racism and cautions
us to ever be vigilant to prevent such an event from happening
again.”
—Jack
Baker, president of the National Trail of Tears Association
“Pat
Musick’s Stone Songs on the Trail of Tears
suggests not only the literal burdens that the Indians carried
on the Trail but the spiritual burden of psychological scars
that resulted from the loss of everything familiar, dear and
sacred as well as the terrible burden of history that the
dark days of the removal represent to the tribes today. The
burden does not belong only to those whose family stories
keep it alive. It is a burden that American society must also
bear. It behooves us not only just to tell the story but to
tell it as truthfully, as accurately and as well as we can—through
our literature and our history—and to interpret it as
sensitively as we can in our art, as Pat Musick has done.”
—Dan
Littlefield, president of the Arkansas Trail of Tears Association
Pat
Musick’s
unique work combines her intimate knowledge of nature and
her urge to create, producing works with a harmonious blending
of shape, material, and color. Her installations have been
shown throughout the United States, particularly in the Southeast,
where many can be found on permanent display. She lives in
the seclusion and natural beauty of the Ozark Mountains in
Arkansas with her husband, Jerry Carr.
Jerry
Carr
is a retired NASA astronaut who commanded the eighty-four-day
Skylab IV mission. He took over two thousand photos using
a Hasselblad camera similar to the one used to photograph
Yokes. Since the early 1980s, he has also documented all of
Musick’s work. He photographed the Yokes sculpture at
more than fifty sites, from which twenty-two were selected
to be in the book.
Bill Woodiel
is a historian and former high-school history teacher from
Mountain Home, Arkansas. For the past ten years he has researched
and found many sites along the Cherokee Trail of Tears. A
past vice-president of the Arkansas chapter of the Trail of
Tears Association, he was an invaluable resource and adviser
to Musick and her crew.
October
120 pages, 70 color photos, 1 map
11" x 9"
$29.95 (s) Cloth
ISBN 978-1-55728-800-4 | 1-55728-800-3
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