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"Peace By Piece" Installation In Safety Harbor E-mail
Saturday, 01 December 2007
toddmonk.01.dec07
A monk in Luang Prabang, Laos creates a peace flag with Safety Harbor artist Todd Ramquist. The monk’s flag and thousands of others are on display at a holiday art installation at Ramquist’s Safety Harbor home, “Whimzey.”

BY FLOYD EGNER
Publisher, Tropical Breeze


A vacation to Myanmar has inspired Safety Harbor artists Kiaralinda and Todd Ramquist to launch an interactive, communal art experience that promises to be a “don’t miss” highlight of the local holiday season. It will envelope their home in pleas for peace.

“Peace on Earth, Peace by Piece” officially opens Monday, Dec. 17 at the artists’ home at 1206 Third St. N., Safety Harbor.

Their home, Whimzey or as it is frequently called, the Bowling Ball House, will disappear beneath hundreds, perhaps thousands, of banners expressing desires for peace. The idea began to form in October as Kiaralinda and Todd traveled literally around the world, flying from the U.S. to Istanbul, Turkey, on to Southeast Asia and then back to the U.S. via Korea and Hawaii.

“The idea actually began in a coffeehouse in Istanbul, in conversations with artists,” Kiaralinda said. “The discussion was about how writers and artists are in charge of changing how the world thinks about things.” Experiences on the trip encouraged the couple to think about ways in which they could contribute to awareness of world events.

In particular, a long-planned portion of the trip was to visit Myanmar, formerly Burma, which erupted in violence late in September as thousands of Buddhist monks protested repression by the military government that has controlled the country for decades and has imprisoned elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi in her own home since she won the nation’s last democratic election in 1990.

“Friends, family, everyone said don’t go to Myanmar,” Kiaralinda said. “But years ago, we toasted and made a promise to D.J. and Catherine.”

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Todd Ramquist, Catherine Condon, D.J. Condon and Kiaralinda in Luang Prabang, Laos.


The promise was to visit D.J. and
Catherine Condon whereever they moved
as they began careers as international
educators. The Condons, who 15 years
ago were neighbors of Todd and Kiaralinda in Safety Harbor, first moved from here to Amsterdam with their three young children. Both sons are now in college and their daughter recently graduated. The family has lived and worked in Europe; Taipai, Taiwan and most recently Myanmar. D.J. is principal at The International School in Yangon, formerly known as Rangoon.

“We were able to contact D.J. and Catherine and they said it was okay to visit,” Kiaralinda said. “The military was not bothering foreign tourists.”

While the Condons were experiencing life in other cultures, Todd and Kiaralinda were becoming renowned for their art projects, including several holiday art installations. In addition to their trademark Safety Harbor residence, they designed the first of their celebrated art cars. It began as a hearse offered as first prize in a Halloween costume contest. By the time the duo was finished, their prize was transformed, covered in multi-color bits of ceramic tile and dubbed “Play Now, Rest Later.”

The hearse was featured in numerous parades, pictured in Smithsonian Magazine and finally was shipped to Amsterdam — where the Condons lived.
The car stayed, the Condons moved on.

Todd and Kiaralinda have traveled the globe. Visits to Mexico inspired a second extravagantly decorated house, Casa Loco, which is located across the street from Whimzey and will be part of the current holiday installation. In addition to trips to Japan, Korea and, of course, Taipai while the Condons were living there, they were on board a flight from Phuket, Thailand to Indian in December 2004 when they learned the Boxing Day tsunami had destroyed the hotel and community they had just left.

That tragedy inspired them to conduct several fundraisers locally for tsunami relief charities and, later, more fundraisers for U.S. charities when
Katrina devastated New Orleans. But the experience in Myanmar was in some fashion more profound. It gave the couple a renewed appreciation of the meaning of world peace.

“It’s not just about politics, not just about being anti-war,” Kiaralinda said. “We wanted to involve the community in thinking about living the way you want to live, without fear and oppression. But, because it’s us, we wanted it to be whimsical, too.”

Among their most whimsical activities during the 1990s were several holiday art installations that involved the community in themed projects that so transformed their home that its usual incarnation seems tame. The most spectacular, and exhausting, was the Year 2000 millennium
project called “Shine On.” Every bit of the home and yard, including plants, was wrapped in mylar and aluminum foil and flooded with lights.

The result was spectacular and visited by thousands, whose contributions resulted in significant donations to several charities. Afterward, the artists said there would not be another similar project until 2020. The visit to Myanmar changed that resolve.

The Whimzey couple’s website, www.kiaralinda.com, offers specific instructions on how anyone may participate in the installation by contributing a
“piece” dedicated to peace.


PHOTO FOR TROPICAL BREEZE COURTESY TODD RAMQUIST AND KIARALINDA 

 
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