Soto, a Florida Institute of Technology student who set out to create the memorial near the collapsed building site, and other volunteers began to clean up the site Wednesday. They will redecorate it with fresh flowers from local florists Thursday. They plan to hold a vigil at 8:30 p.m. Thursday.
“It just became very relatable and personal to me,” said Soto, who went to a print shop shortly after the collapse to print photos of the victims. “I was looking at all these names and seeing people that looked like my mom, my grandma, so I just wanted to help. And the memorial just took on a life of its own after that.”
Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett said he had spoken to victims and their families about preserving the memorial. They discussed having a portrait made of the memorial, having a large photo printed or even removing the chain link fence and including it in a larger memorial.
“Those are just some of the ideas that I’ve talked about with family members and others,” Burkett said Wednesday, “because obviously we want to make sure that this is not forgotten.”
The memorial outside the site isn’t the only effort to honor the victims.
Marquez traveled to Surfside from Dallas the day after the collapse to volunteer to help search for victims. Officials declined his offer, so he went to Home Depot and built two large canvases and began to paint an emotionally raw scene reminiscent of Pablo Picasso’s “Guernica,” a cubist masterpiece that depicts the Spanish town in ruins after a 1937 bombing by Nazi Germany.
For the past two weeks, Marquez has worked from 6:30 a.m. until nightfall — weather permitting — on two paintings that depict elements of the building’s collapse. Covered by tarps and a beach umbrella, he has worked next to the memorial to depict a woman being pulled from the rubble, a clock stopped at the time the building collapsed, a priest clutching a cross, a first responder’s ladder descending into the debris.
It’s a powerful image made all the stronger for its proximity to the scene. Viewers can hear the excavators digging just behind the canvas, which leans against the same chain link fence the memorial is built around. Marquez, who temporarily returned to Dallas to rest and pick up more paint, said being at the scene inspired him further — whether it was because of the emotion shared by crying visitors or the building site’s dust that blew by, making it hard to breathe.
“I hope people will be able to see it down the road and remember what happened there,” Marquez said over the phone. “We tend to forget so easily, so I hope people will be able to look at it and feel what it was like to be there.”
Marquez said he would like the painting to help raise money for the victims and to serve as a reminder of the residents who died. Soto is working with the local art community to find a place to store the painting until Marquez can return to finish it.
“I would like it to stay where the public in general can see it. It’s a memorial,” Marquez said. “But if that’s not possible, then maybe a gallery somewhere in Miami will take it.”
Meanwhile, Holbrook has completed a mural in Wynwood, a neighborhood famous for its graffiti art and murals, showing hands reaching together.
Holbrook said he often spent time on the beach in Surfside, a quiet place where he could sketch his next designs. Soon after the building collapsed, he said, he got permission to paint the mural and set to work, choosing Wynwood because of its heavy tourist traffic.
“I thought it was my duty to do something large just to show support for the families,” said Holbrook, who finished the mural Wednesday. “I thought it was important to have something in Miami that could be a memorial, a place for healing, a place so no one will forget.”
Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com