HEATHER MEKKELSON
Saturday, March 9th, 7-10pm
My great-grandfather haled from Stopnica, Poland where his
occupation was forester. Upon immigrating to America he settled in North
Central Pennsylvania where the only work he could find was as a coal miner. He
missed the sun. The following historical account made national news but few
believed his eyewitness account.
In the summer of 1928, Stanislaw Jendruch
arrived at the coal mine outside of Coudersport, PA for another fourteen hour
shift. The time was 5:48 a.m. At 5:46 a.m. the explosion that ripped apart the
shaft walls and collapsed the main entrance killed all 43 men and boys who were
inside. Stanislaw heard no blast; he was hard of hearing from working with
black powder for the last several years. But as he approached the mine, he
could recognize the absence of sound all around him. There was no possible way
to remove the rubble blocking the portal. Stanislaw, alone at the mining site,
ran to the obstructed entrance, and through a small opening, peered in. He
could not sufficiently describe in English what he saw, but the closest
translation that his wife, Amelia Angeline, could tell the newspapers was that
"a glow suggestive of the stopping of stars" poured through.
Heather Mekkelson’s solo and two-person exhibitions include threewalls (Chicago), Roots and Culture (Chicago), Old Gold (Chicago), and STANDARD (Chicago). Her work has also been included in group shows at The Museum of Contemporary Photography (Chicago), The Figge Art Museum (Davenport, IA), The Poor Farm (Manawa, WI), Raid Projects (Los Angeles, CA), and Vox Populi (Philadelphia, PA). She has had her work published in Art Journal, Broadsheet (The Contemporary Art Center of South Australia), Time Out Chicago, Chicago Tribune, andArtforum.com. Most recently,Mekkelson became an Artadia Award Chicago 2012 awardee.
No comments:
Post a Comment