Posted on Jun 6, 2021
This 21-Year-Old College Student Designed the Vietnam Veterans Memorial
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On June 6, 1981, Maya Yang Lin won the competition to design the Vietnam War Memorial. Controversial at first, it has become a much beloved memorial for Vietnam veterans. From the article:
"Instead of something heroic or celebratory, Lin imagined two stark black walls that began inside the earth, then grew and grew in height until they met—like a “wound that is closed and healing.” The V-shaped wall, designed to point toward the Lincoln and Washington Memorials, would be inscribed with the names of the dead in chronological order. It would exist inside a park, as inextricable from the landscape as it was from the minds of Americans.
“I just wanted to be honest with people,” Lin told The Washington Post. “I didn’t want to make something that said ‘They’ve gone away for a while.’ I wanted something that would just simply say ‘They can never come back. They should be remembered.’”
The jury, which judged the entries blind, agreed. (Meanwhile, Lin only got a B on her assignment; she ended up beating out her professor in the competition.) But Lin’s bleak concept didn’t sit well with many members of the public, who expected a more imposing, complex and grandiose monument with marble, columns and statues in the vein of other buildings on the Mall, like the Lincoln or Jefferson Memorials."
"Instead of something heroic or celebratory, Lin imagined two stark black walls that began inside the earth, then grew and grew in height until they met—like a “wound that is closed and healing.” The V-shaped wall, designed to point toward the Lincoln and Washington Memorials, would be inscribed with the names of the dead in chronological order. It would exist inside a park, as inextricable from the landscape as it was from the minds of Americans.
“I just wanted to be honest with people,” Lin told The Washington Post. “I didn’t want to make something that said ‘They’ve gone away for a while.’ I wanted something that would just simply say ‘They can never come back. They should be remembered.’”
The jury, which judged the entries blind, agreed. (Meanwhile, Lin only got a B on her assignment; she ended up beating out her professor in the competition.) But Lin’s bleak concept didn’t sit well with many members of the public, who expected a more imposing, complex and grandiose monument with marble, columns and statues in the vein of other buildings on the Mall, like the Lincoln or Jefferson Memorials."
This 21-Year-Old College Student Designed the Vietnam Veterans Memorial
Posted from history.com
Posted >1 y ago
Responses: 7
Posted >1 y ago
Lots of controversy over that decision but when you go there you know it was the right one.
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Posted >1 y ago
So much controversy when it was selected but it truly has connected with veterans and family members as well as becoming a huge tourist attraction
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SGT (Join to see)
>1 y
I agree! It is a beautiful monument. Who has not looked for a loved one, friend, or comrade and traced the name? I knew it was controversial, and they added the statues, but the Wall is still the greatest memorial of the Vietnam War. Lt Col Charlie Brown
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Posted >1 y ago
I knew this and I always thought it the most fitting part of the memorial. But let's not tell the China Virus people this. It would destroy their superiority complex.
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