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Hospital Debris, Heart Mountain, Wyoming (from the Whispered Silences: Japanese Americans and World War II)
Hospital Debris, Heart Mountain, Wyoming (from the Whispered Silences: Japanese Americans and World War II)
Hospital Debris, Heart Mountain, Wyoming (from the Whispered Silences: Japanese Americans and World War II)

Hospital Debris, Heart Mountain, Wyoming (from the Whispered Silences: Japanese Americans and World War II)

Artist (American, born 1944)
Date1984 (printed 1988)
Mediumplatinum- palladium print
DimensionsImage: 14 1/2 × 18 3/4 in. (36.8 × 47.6 cm)
Support: 17 3/4 × 22 9/16 in. (45.1 × 57.3 cm)
ClassificationsPhotograph
Credit LineGift of Joan Myers, 2017
Object number2017.5.13
DescriptionLandscape with mountains in background and large corrugated metal forms.
eMuseum Notes

Located near the small community of Granada in southeastern Colorado, the Granada War Relocation Center (also called Camp Amache) opened in 1942 and reached a peak population of more than 7,000 people by the beginning of the following year. It was the smallest relocation camp and most of the residents were from California. The abandoned site was designated a National Historic Site in 2006 and its sole remaining original building is a pump house.

Throughout her series Whispered Silences, Myers uses the camera to convey the solemn, isolated landscapes of former Japanese internment camps, highlighting physical ruins and abandoned objects. This is dynamic image juxtaposes a scenic view of the Western landscape with metal debris in from a former hospital, the remains of an otherwise invisible human history of the Heart Mountain camp in Wyoming.  The discarded, hollow metal forms, along with the empty landscape, convey the heavy weight and sadness of the site’s history.
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