In prior blogs, I wrote about painting cemetery statues with light (How to Paint Tombstones), but then I thought, how about with actual paint?! You know, picture
tempera paint, something water-based that will wash off in the rain (think
sidewalk chalk drawings a la Mary Poppins). Or maybe something permanent like
tinted hydrostatic paint (the kind with which you seal basement walls). How
cool would those weather-beaten white marble headstones look if
artists were to paint them! You know, highlight the worn detail areas so they
could be discerned. (I personally would not do this as I am no artist - my effort would end up looking like the work of a third-grader!)
This is all tongue-in-cheek, of course, I’m not seriously suggesting this at all, but sometimes my brain
just puts all these ideas together in well, the way an unsupervised child
might make a stew. I mean, what would the families of the dearly departed
think? Well, it is another way of memorializing the dead, of keeping them in
our memory. Permission would need to be given by the family
(descendants), of course. But maybe there are none - we’re talking about grave markers
that are a hundred and more years old. You may not know this unless you hang
around in graveyards, but the use of marble for headstones became far less
popular toward the end of the 1800s. Taphophiles on the other hand, take this fact for
granite (pun intended).
Speaking of granite, paint would adhere to it with greater difficulty than it would to marble, I
suppose, since marble is much more porous. After painting, we could apply a
preservative chemical over the whole thing like they do with bronze
statues to keep them from oxidizing.
Perhaps the
stones could be painted with surreal designs or camouflaged as green grass so
people would walk into them! Families can commission artists to paint the headstones or other monuments
(artists can always use the money: What’s the difference between an artist and
a pizza? A pizza can feed a family of four!). They can even leave the design up
to the artist, like the way Philadelphians commission artist Izaiah Zagar to create
and install mosaics of broken mirrors and ceramic on their homes and
businesses. Maybe the Philadelphia Mural Arts Program could have a branch
called the Philadelphia Tombstone Arts Program …
Of course all this could possibly lead to only one thing: someone might eventually get carried away and
suggest shrink-wrapping the headstones like they do with advertising vehicle wraps. Hey wait a minute - this would not hurt the stone, it would preserve it, and it could be printed with all the same information and designs as the headstone underneath - why not?
Ed, you're the first person to mention the blue painter's tape. It was placed on certain stones a number of years ago by a member of the cemetery's Friends group who shall remain nameless. The tape indicated veterans' graves that needed to have flag holders placed on them. You have sharp eyes!
ReplyDeleteInteresting! Thank you. Someone on Facebook mentioned it is sometimes used to hold paper for rubbings!
ReplyDeleteOne of your people mentioned the wrapping I think that would really be sweet
ReplyDelete