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Public
Employee Press City
employees in art show focus on WTC tragedy
Seven years ago, the events of 9/11 brought a
small group of Civil Service Technical Guild Local 375 members together
united by their experiences of that tragic day. This summer, they exhibited their
art in the second annual City Workers Exhibition at the century-old Salmagundi
Club, a center for fine artists.
Valentina Tina Karmanskaya,
a Design Project Manager for the New York City Housing Authority, was in her office
at 90 Church St. when the terrorists struck. My colleagues and I witnessed
the tragedy through the windows, she recalled. For the next year or
so, we were sad and angry all the time. You see some of this sadness in my art
work.
Construction Project Manager Michael Kenny of the Dept. of
Design and Construction spent seven months at Ground Zero. My health has
been affected and my outlook on life has been changed, but in a good way,
he said. Kennys watercolor, WTC: Inside the Pit, depicts the
aftermath of 9/11 and how the victims of that day must have felt, he said.
Joshua
Barnett, a CPM at NYCHA, was on his way to work at 90 Church St. when the attacks
occurred. After 9/11, the building was heavily contaminated and NYCHA moved
us to other offices. Many members who worked on the cleanup had their health badly
harmed, said Barnett.
His opus is a collage of black and white photos
of exploited workers from around the world and the quote, When a man tells
you he got rich through hard work, ask him whose?
All three artists
were buoyed by theexperience. This was a good opportunity to share a part
of me with others, as well as sneak into their souls, too, said Karmanskaya.
I met the most amazing people while I worked at the site. This gathering
of artists shows just how talented city workers are, said Kenny. | |