[On April
9th, 2003 a group of both Iraqi civilians and U.S. military
forces together toppled the statue of Saddam Hussein in Baghdad’s Firdos
Square, a hugely symbolic moment that highlights the role statues can play in
our communal spaces and identities. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy that moment
and four other statues, leading up to a weekend post on my own continuing
thoughts on Confederate statues like those in my
hometown.]
On a few
illuminating contexts for a ginormous American statue.
Near Eureka
Springs, Arkansas, at the top of the strikingly named Magnetic Mountain,
stands a 65.5 foot-tall
statue of Jesus. “Christ of the Ozarks” was erected by retired clergyman
and political organizer Gerald
L.K. Smith as part of a planned religious theme park on his sprawling
estate that he called collectively his
“Sacred Projects” (that overall project largely didn’t pan out, although
Smith did also build a 4100-seat amphitheater where performances of “The Great Passion Play” are to this
day featured almost nightly from May through October each year and have become
one of the nation’s most-attended theatrical events). The statue, designed
primarily by sculptor
Emmet Sullivan and completed in 1966, faces the town of Eureka Springs as a
blessing on and thank you to the town for allowing Smith to construct such a
giant monument. I haven’t seen confirmation of this, but I have to believe it’s
the second largest statue in the U.S. that portrays a single human subject,
trailing only Monday’s subject the Statue of Liberty (and of course Jesus
Christ was an actual historical figure as well as a symbolic one like Lady
Liberty).
When we learn
more about the personal and social histories of both Smith and Sullivan, the
symbolic American meanings of “Christ of the Ozarks” deepen significantly. Smith
initially rose to national prominence working with Huey
Long in Louisiana; he quit his ministry in order to help run Long’s Share Our
Wealth campaign, and took it over entirely after Long’s 1935 assassination.
But while Long focused more overtly on issues of class and poverty, Smith was
more dedicated to the cause of white supremacy, and gradually moved more fully
into that realm. Those efforts culminated during World War II, in the course of
which he founded the anti-Semitic America
First Party and ran for President in 1944,
denied the Holocaust, lobbied for the release of the Nazi defendants at the
Nuremberg Trials, and generally became one of America’s most extreme white
supremacist voices. I don’t mean to suggest that white supremacy and
Evangelical Christianity are necessarily linked, but they certainly have often
been, as we’re seeing again with the strikingly resilient
evangelical support for our most overtly white supremacist president. At
the very least it’s an important and telling fact that the nation’s largest
monument to Christianity was constructed by one of the most extreme white
supremacists of at least the last century.
Emmet Sullivan,
the sculptor of “Christ of the Ozarks,” fortunately was not as far as I can
tell an extreme white supremacist (or even a white supremacist at all). Instead,
his telling American contexts are to two quite distinct South Dakota artistic
and cultural projects. Born in Montana, Sullivan’s first significant project
was his work as one of the sculptors
of Mount Rushmore in the late 1920s and 1930s. During those same years,
Sullivan received his first sizeable solo project, designing and sculpting the
five mammoth dinosaurs (sorry paleontologists, I know that’s a frustrating
pairing of words) at Rapid
City’s Dinosaur Park. Despite their relative proximity, these two
sculptures might seem not only different but ever opposed, with one based on
American history and the other on distant
and unrelated prehistories of the continent. But I would say that both
depict actual historical figures in larger than life and somewhat caricatured
ways, reflecting more their symbolic value than any details of their historical
identities. And in that sense, there might be a compelling continuity between
those projects and Sullivan’s last prominent one (completed just four years
before his death), “Christ of the Ozarks.”
Last statue
tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other statues you’d highlight and analyze?
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