Comments for The Enchanted Highway, Part II

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This piece belongs to the series "The Enchanted Highway/3 part series"

Produced by Long Haul Productions

Other pieces by Long Haul Productions

Summary: A radio documentary profiling artist Gary Greff’s attempt to save his dying Great Plains hometown by building giant metal sculptures along a lonely strip of county road.
 

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I know The Enchanted Highway

My mother, two younger sisters and younger brother lived in Regent from 1980 until 2000, when my mother passed away. Going to visit many many times over the years, I can say that, while the sculptures aren't "high art," they are phenomenal...out there in the middle of nowhere and LARGE on such a lonely stretch of highway.

Caption: PRX default User image

I know The Enchanted Highway

My mother, two younger sisters and younger brother lived in Regent from 1980 until 2000, when my mother passed away. Going to visit many many times over the years, I can say that, while the sculptures aren't "high art," they are phenomenal...out there in the middle of nowhere and LARGE on such a lonely stretch of highway.

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Review of The Enchanted Highway, Part II

What if you go home to the town where you were born and raised and find that it's dying...slowly? Would you become obsessed with trying to save it? If so, what hair-brained idea would YOU come-up with?

While erecting a giant tin family would not be MY idea, it does make for a curious pass on a quiet North Dakotan highway. What brings the deep humanity to the essence of this piece however, is the monumental gesture. By building giant sculptures of tin families of people, deer, grasshoppers and geese in flight, Gary Graff has placed in the landscape a reminder of what brought him home in the first place.

This listen is multi-dimensional. Like a piece of literature, it mushrooms in the mind with the memory of it. It's brilliantly edited with a rich inter-woven dialogue between narration and live recording. I cannot recommend this piece strongly enough as a message of hope beyond time. While a vision and dream may be unrealized in the life of the dreamer, what lasts lives on beyond their passing.