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Pasadena People: Catherine Menard, Environmental Design Student

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  • Pasadena People: Catherine Menard, Environmental Design Student

    PASADENA PEOPLE: CATHERINE MENARD, ENVIRONMENTAL DESIGN STUDENT

    Her design concept won the Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial
    competition. She aims to complete the memorial by 2015, in time for
    the 100th anniversary of the tragedy.

    http://pasadena-ca.patch.com/articles/people-meet-catherine-menard-pasadena-art-center-college-of-design-armenian-genocide-memorial
    By Redmond Carolipio Email the author 1:00 pm

    If you ask Catherine Menard what she does, you probably won't hear
    "artist." If anything, she might smile and ask, "What do you think I
    am?" It's in good fun - the 26-year-old is a bundle of smiles and
    bouncy hair - but one gets the sense it's her way to get people to
    engage and think on their own.

    "I have this belief that you don't call yourself an artist, people
    do," she said. "And then you prove it."

    Menard, an environmental design student at the Art Center College of
    Design, recently won the Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial
    Competition, which featured 17 proposed design concepts for a memorial
    to commemorate the Armenian Genocide. The concepts were judged by the
    Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial Committee. The proposed site is,
    perhaps fittingly, Memorial Park in Pasadena, with the dedication
    slated for April of 2015.

    The college describes Menard's concept as "a carved-stone basin of
    water straddled by a tripod arrangement of three columns leaning into
    one another-is a single drop of water that falls from the highest
    point every three seconds, each 'teardrop' representing one life lost.

    Over the course of one year, 1.5 million tears will fall into the
    pool, the estimated number of victims of the Armenian Genocide."

    Born in Louisiana, the French-Cajun Pasadena resident moved to SoCal
    when she was 4 years old, living in Upland and Los Angeles before
    finding Pasadena. She sat down with Patch to chat about her work on
    the memorial.

    Patch: Your design won, and I read that your initial reaction was
    shock. What's going through your mind now?

    Catherine Menard: Thankfully, I have amazing people who are going to
    kind of guide me through this process. Stefanos Polyzoides is going to
    be my overseeing architect. We went through a broad overview of what
    this is going to look like in stages. We still very much need to
    continue to present to the city of Pasadena, because initially for the
    competition regulations, there were to be no working systems, no water
    systems, the regulation height was five feet ... all of these things
    that I paid no attention to whatsoever (slight laugh, smile) because I
    thought the concept was so strong and had to be a certain way.

    Luckily, (Polyzoides) feels that way too, so we're going to try prove
    ourselves in saying that this is the way it needs to be built, please
    allow for this, please allow for the Pasadena budget to accommodate,
    and possibly get some donations from the Armenian community to upkeep
    such an involved memorial.

    Patch: What's it like building something that memorializes a tragedy
    versus anything else? What emotions does that bring up?

    CM: I couldn't even approach it. I didn't feel like I knew enough, so
    I just read and I read and I read. I interviewed my Armenian friends.

    I did everything I could to just let it get into me. And aside from
    not having the direct knowledge of this particular genocide ... being an
    American girl, I feel so detached from this kind of conflict, tragedy
    or brutality ... how does anyone relate to this?

    Patch: What are some things you learned about the Armenian Genocide
    (and in researching other kinds of genocide) that really struck
    something within you?

    CM: They killed the artists and intellectuals first. That hit me ...

    you're annihilating a culture's artistic creativity and brilliance
    instantly. In the displacement of the American Indians, they would
    just march them to death. There are these images ... these skeleton
    mothers holding these skeleton children. That got me more than
    anything, because how can you be at the front of this line and watch
    this? That imagery is what finally inspired me to say 'Look, this is
    horrific. We have to look at these images, and of course it's awful,
    but you have to understand this true atrocity. Otherwise, we're going
    to stay removed from it and say 'Oh, 1.5 million people, what does
    that mean? That doesn't sound like a lot to me.' But when there's a
    pillar of water falling every three seconds to count the 1.5 million
    people for the year, you can sit and start to really imagine the power
    of that person being lost."

    Patch: Was there ever a worry about such a piece being too dark?

    CM: Absolutely. Initially, I just saw that death image, that
    triangulated, pyramid-like or gallows-like form, saw potential for
    that abstraction ... but it was too much, it was too terrifying within
    itself, it needed that balance. I was able to balance it with the
    water and this hope of eternity and this everlasting collection that
    gathers the spirits. The form is weeping. It's mourning each death.

    Yes, it's terrifying itself, but it has that balance ... I think I
    finally found that in the ultimate design.

    Patch: People are going to take pictures next to this. People from
    different generations of a culture will be checking this out ...

    CM: It blows my mind. When my boyfriend brought this to my attention,
    we were having kind of a celebratory dinner, and he was walking me
    through this scenario ... I was so emotional, I just couldn't ... I'm
    still emotional! That is it! You're just able to impact a people where
    it matters so deeply to them... that's all I hope is that they want it,
    and that they love it, and want to come and take pictures with it and
    to be a part of it and tell their story. That's what it is. That's
    what it's for.

    Editor's note: Since it's so early in the process, no images of
    Menard's design are available to show. As more details become known,
    we'll share them with you.

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