When you look back in time, remembering events that have happened, only the important and most significant moments stick with you. The memories may be slightly foggy, details and dates may be mixed but the main memory is always intact. When I look back at growing up in Jeffersonville, Indiana I have many of these memories. Jeffersonville is a city where not that much happens. Most people who live here go to the surrounding towns and cities, such as Clarksville, IN and Louisville KY to enjoy shopping, dining and entertainment so it was to our excitement when an artist installed a 20ft statue in the industrial area of our boring town.
Winds of Change or The Lady as most people refer to it is a 20ft tall statue of a woman, made entirely of metal hubcaps welded together. This statue is standing on a pile of busted concrete blocks. She stands with her back leaning slightly backwards as her cape, which is draped over her shoulders blows in the wind. Her left hand rests lightly on her chest as her right hand is holding a rose. The size of the statue gives a feeling of strength and power to the piece. Behind the statue is another part of the installation which is a 10ft tall scale, made of welded metal and metal cross beams, this scale is holding two metal boulders, one on each side. There are words inscribed on both metal boulders. One reads “Commitments” and the other reads “Love”. Below each boulder, on the ground lays a pyramid made out of bricks. The pyramids displays more messages. The one that lays below the “Commitments” boulder declares “Always Too Much” and the one that lays below the “Love” boulder declares “Never Enough”. Winds of Change was commissioned in 1993 by local business owner Larry Meyers. Meyers hired recent high...
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...rom its beginning to current time. Every time I travel to visit my mother, who lives in the same house that I grew up in, I see the statue of The Lady and no matter if I am purposely looking or not, she stands out as a part of this city. The Winds of Change has evolved for me from being just “ugly” to showing the true purpose and meaning of the piece which represents women and is a tribute to the endurance and strength they possess.
Works Cited
The Lady. Geocaching. Quiddler. December 18, 2012. November 17, 2013. http://www.geocaching.com/geocache/GCB614_the-lady?guid=5f89c43f-9981-46c8-b0e5-f18a2306e656
Roadsideamerica.com. November 17, 2013. November 17, 2103 http://www.roadsideamerica.com/tip/3673
“The Lady- Jeffersonville, Indiana”. Lane Weiser. May 19, 2013. November 17, 2013. http://eerie-indiana.blogspot.com/2013/05/the-lady-jeffersonville-indiana.html
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Engel, Mary Ella. “The Appalachian “Granny”: Testing the Boundaries of Female Power in Late-19th-Century Appalachian Georgia.” Appalachian Journal 37.3/4 (2010): 210-225 Literary Reference Center. Web. 14 Nov. 2013.
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