GUTTER CREDITS
132 OCTOBER 2019
National
Memorial for
Peace and Justice
A sobering monument
dedicated to African Americans
who have been victims of racial
terror—whether by slavery,
lynching, segregation or police
brutality—the memorial was
conceived by human-rights lawyer
Bryan Stevenson’s Equal Justice
Initiative and designed by MASS
Design Group. Completed just last
year in Montgomery, Alabama,
the memorial features a haunting
centerpiece: 800 rusting steel
columns—each representing a
US county where a lynching took
place—suspended from the ceiling
and engraved with the names of
more than 4,000 victims. Even
more shocking: The surrounding
fields hold hundreds more columns
waiting for counties to claim
them—and own up to their part in
American racial injustice.
“The memorial has
a terrible beauty. It
has this tonal match
between program,
structure and site
that’s not easy to
achieve-—it retains
austere and forthright
qualities, with a shift
from lightness in the
landscape to rhythmic
heaviness as you get
closer to it.”
THOMAS WOLTZ,
landscape architect DBIMAGES/ALAMY
132 OCTOBER 2019
National
Memorial for
Peace and Justice
A sobering monument
dedicated to African Americans
who have been victims of racial
terror—whether by slavery,
lynching, segregation or police
brutality—the memorial was
conceived by human-rights lawyer
Bryan Stevenson’s Equal Justice
Initiative and designed by MASS
Design Group. Completed just last
year in Montgomery, Alabama,
the memorial features a haunting
centerpiece: 800 rusting steel
columns—each representing a
US county where a lynching took
place—suspended from the ceiling
and engraved with the names of
more than 4,000 victims. Even
more shocking: The surrounding
fields hold hundreds more columns
waiting for counties to claim
them—and own up to their part in
American racial injustice.
“The memorial has
a terrible beauty. It
has this tonal match
between program,
structure and site
that’s not easy to
achieve-—it retains
austere and forthright
qualities, with a shift
from lightness in the
landscape to rhythmic
heaviness as you get
closer to it.”
THOMAS WOLTZ,
landscape architect DBIMAGES/ALAMY