Providential Happening
A fiery installation draws crowds in Providence, Rhode Island, illuminating a "daylighting" trend
- By Fred Hapgood
- Smithsonian magazine, November 2002, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
The largest urban renewal project in the city’s history involved rerouting automobile traffic and building 12 new bridges. A downstream post office at the junction of the Woonasquatucket and MoshassuckRivers could not be moved, so the rivers were redirected. "We basically just picked up the confluence and moved it 150 yards east," Warner says.
As it happened, Evans, the artist, created his second fire installation at an arts festival in 1996, around the time of the daylighting project’s completion. Then he kept hearing from residents who wanted to see the piece again; it was as though they’d never noticed the rivers before, he recalls. A nonprofit group, WaterFire Providence, was started to continue staging the event. Its budget this year is more than $1 million, with money from the city and state governments, corporations, foundations—and fans. The event, the Providence Journal editorialized in 1997, is the most popular work of art in the city’s history.
Does WaterFire mean anything in particular? Is it a takeoff on a religious rite? A commentary on the lack of meaningful ritual in American life? Evans says it’s open to interpretation. "It is a ritual and a ceremony that refers to scores of religious festivals, as well as contemporary art," he says. "But I didn’t want all that symbolism to get in the way of someone enjoying it simply for the beauty of it."
The music, emanating from invisible loudspeakers alongside the rivers, seems to come not from a single point but from all of Providence, as if the city were one instrument. The heat from the fires, the cedar smoke and the rhythms and chants seem to transport visitors to another time and place. Around midnight, after the crowds have drifted away, people still sit by the riverbanks, staring into the flames. Not until the fires die do they seem to rediscover themselves, shake themselves out and head for home.
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