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Sacred Dust

Photographs by Henry Leutwyler

September 10 – 26, 2021

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Debris excavated by forensic archeologists from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner

12h x 9w in

HL114

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Scorched office Rolodex excavated by forensic archeologists from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner

The World Trade Center would have contained countless varieties of these rotating file devices holding index cards with contact information on them. However, this partial desk Rolodex is a rarity among the workplace tokens found in the aftermath of the attacks.

12h x 9w in

HL113

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Subway emergency exit key recovered from the World Trade Center site

Fire Department personnel at Ground Zero recognized this odd-shaped tool as a device their members used to open sidewalk hatches to the subway system in an emergency. General located between station stops, the hatch led to a ladder descending to the tracks.

12h x 9w in

HL112

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Figurine excavated by forensic archeologists from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner

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HL111

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Glass marble, thought to date from the early 19th Century, excavated by forensic archeologists from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.

The World Trade Center rose on former Hudson River shoreline deliberately infilled over several centuries for wharves and maritime industry.

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HL110

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Film strip excavated by forensic archeologists from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner

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HL109

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Airplane fragment excavated by forensic archeologists from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner

When sifting through debris at Ground Zero and at the Fresh Kills Landfill in Staten Island, investigators and recovery workers found thousands of scraps of green-hued fuselage from the two hijacked planes.

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HL108

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Recovered lock box panel from Floor Warden emergency telephone.

Following the 1993 bombing of the World Trade Center, the Port Authority instituted numerous safety and security improvements. These included increased evacuation drills, emergency training for building occupants, and installing emergency telephones on every floor for use by tenant-designated wardens.

12h x 9w in

HL107

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Hairbrush recovered from the World Trade Center site

The hairbrush finder was a retired FDNY Rescue 2 member who spent months at Ground Zero aiding the recovery operations while searching for his missing son, also a firefighter.

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HL106

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Tupperware lid excavated by forensic archeologists from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner

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HL105

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Concrete fragment recovered from the World Trade Center site

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HL104

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Melted plastic sleeve from destroyed FDNY ambulance

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HL103

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Scorched debris from destroyed FDNY ambulance

Recovered from the World Trade Center site after September 11, 2001.

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HL102

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Scorched spiral-bound map of New York City from destroyed FDNY ambulance

When debris punctured the vehicle’s roof, its interior contents were incinerated, including most of this book of local maps.

12h x 9w in

HL101

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Garban-Intercaptial trading desk keyboard excavated by forensic archeologists from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner
Described as a swaps trading house, Garban Intercapital occupied floors 25 and 26h of the North Tower.

12h x 9w in

HL100

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Butter knife recovered from the World Trade Center site.

Recovery workers from the Port Authority of New York & New Jersey were especially attuned to setting aside relics associated with day to day life at the World Trade Center. Among the items they salvaged were pieces of cutlery used at the Windows on the World.

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HL099

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Fused glass recovered from the World Trade Center site. Together, the Twin Towers had 43,600 windows, almost all shattered and pulverized when the buildings collapsed.

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HL098

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Port Authority, State of New York plaque recovered from the World Trade Center site
Nancy Seliga was the Port Authority’s building manager for the North Tower. During the recovery operations, various items of property traceable to the World Trade Center complex were entrusted to her custody.

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HL097

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Copper wiring excavated by forensic archeologists from the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner.

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HL096

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Recovered sprinkler head.

Designed and built without sprinklers, the World Trade Center underwent a lengthy project to retrofit the Towers with an overhead sprinkler system, completed in the latter 1990s. This device was found in the wreckage by FDNY Lieutenant Brenda Berkman who arrived downtown just after the North Tower collapsed and spent weeks searching for survivors and human remains.

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HL095

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Wristwatch recovered from Fresh Kills landfill, originally belonging to victim Rosemary A. Smith.

The telephone operator at Sidley, Austin, Brown and Wood on the 57th floor of the North Tower, 61-year old Rosemary Smith had survived the first World Trade Center attack. Anxious about going back to a skyscraper targeted by terrorists, she nonetheless returned to work at the law firm after the 1993 bombing.

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HL094

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

FDNY-issued bunker gear worn by Ladder 35 firefighter Kevin Shea.

Shea sustained a broken neck and other grave injuries when blown off his feet by the force of the collapsing South Tower. This protective wear was removed from his body at the hospital where he was transported for treatment.

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HL093

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Recovered fragment of an Otis Elevator sign.

Each of the quarter-mile high Twin Towers was equipped with an internal transportation system of 99 elevators, designated for freight use, and for local or express passenger service.

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HL092

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Digital photograph depicting the original St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church at 155 Cedar Street.

Located in the shadows of the Twin Towers, the church was demolished on September 11th when the first building collapsed at 9:59 am. A new St. Nicholas Church and Shrine built near its original site, designed by Santiago Calatrava, is due to be completed in spring 2022.

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HL091

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Remnant of hijacked United Airlines Flight 175.

This five-foot metal fragment is a part of the aircraft’s wing understructure. It was discovered eleven years after the 2001 attacks wedged in a narrow crevice between 51 Park Place and 50 Murray Street.

60h x 50w in

HL090

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Airplane Engine from United Airlines Flight 93.

Two Boeing 757 engines from hijacked Flight 93 were recovered by investigators: this one, excavated from the crash site, and another, found in a mining pond on the nearby hillside.

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HL089

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Men's Rocky Brand leather boots worn by Sgt. John McLoughlin, a veteran member of the Port Authority Police Department

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Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Shattered fire helmet recovered at Ground Zero in February 2002.

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HL087

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Pair of uniform pants with handwritten note: "Pants worn on 9-11-01 At the WTC. Please DO NOT WASH. The ash is the remains of those that died. God Bless Them!"

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HL086

Henry Leutwyler ,

Henry Leutwyler

Scorched and melted contents from destroyed FDNY Ladder 3 truck.

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HL085

Henry Leutwyler Random Debris, 2021

Henry Leutwyler
Random Debris, 2021
12 x 9 Inches
Chromogenic Print
 

Foley Gallery is proud to present, Sacred Dust:  Photographs by Henry Leutwyler.  The evening reception will feature a performance by the award-winning concert pianist Elaine Kwon.
 

Where were you when The Towers fell?  A question that still lingers on lips as we approach the 20th anniversary of the events of September 11, 2001.  To call it an anniversary belies the positive connotations that usually surround this word. It's a marking of time, of years without friends and loved ones, of imagined history and dashed dreams. "Never Forget" is the phrase we use.

What more can we see that hasn't been seen before, playing, again and again, reliving that day?  With the cooperation of the 9/11 Memorial & Museum in downtown Manhattan, Photographer Henry Leutwyler was commissioned by National Geographic, for their September issue, to explore the museum's archive of over 70,000 objects, remnants, and remembrances recovered from that day.  Some are identifiable, and others remain fragments of their former selves.  Many have never been seen by the general public.


Leutwyler's approach follows his long obsession with objectivity in photography, allowing objects of significance to speak for themselves in neutral environments, free from flourish and aesthetic trappings.  In his Monograph, Document (STEIDL, 2016), he approached objects that produced smiles like Charlie Chaplin's Cane to ones that created darker emotions, including the revolver used to murder John Lennon.


The gallery will exhibit over 30 photographs from this project.  Let these artifacts photographed for Sacred Dust speak to our memories and feelings that continue to surround this day.  Some will need little explanation as their clarity is still intact.  Others will resemble nothing we know in real life.


As viewers, we will experience these photographs of things and respond, one step removed from the objects themselves.  For Leutwyler, having contact with remnants collected from that day released sharply profound emotions:


Having had the privilege to discover and spend weeks and months in various archives and private collections around the world, I have to admit that this assignment for National Geographic left me immensely humbled. I would never have thought that these objects would haunt me since I had the rare privilege to discover them for the first time. While photographing, I often thought what Mr. Penn, one of the most famous photographers of the 20th century, said: "Still life is a representation of people. They are in the background. The camera is simply not focused on them.

 

In her essay that accompanies the National Geographic portfolio, Patricia Edmonds begins: Memorials have replaced some scars left by the attackers, but items pulled from the rubble reveal intimate accounts of bravery, loss, and perseverance.
 

Held in reverence, these artifacts continue to remind us of those we have lost and the day that changed all of our lives forever.
 

All prints from the exhibition will be donated to the permanent collection of the 9/11 Memorial & Museum and will not be available for purchase.
 

You can find more of these powerful images in the September issue of National Geographic magazine, available online at NatGeo.com beginning mid-August.

 

Henry Leutwyler was born in Switzerland in 1961. He lived and worked in Paris for a decade before finding his way to New York City in 1995, where he establishes his reputation as a portrait and still life photographer. Steidl published Leutwyler's first book Neverland Lost: A Portrait of Michael Jackson, in 2010. The first edition of Ballet was published in 2012, the second edition in 2015.  With the publication of Document in 2016, Hi There! in 2020, and fall publication of books on Misty Copeland, Philippe Halsman, and the Red Cross, bringing his STEIDL titles to nine and counting. His photographs have been exhibited in solo shows in Los Angeles, New York City, Paris, Moscow, Madrid, Tokyo, and Zurich. His work has graced the pages of numerous magazines worldwide and has earned him countless honors and awards.