[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 112 (Monday, July 25, 2011)]
[House]
[Pages H5473-H5474]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
RECOGNIZING BARRY WONENBERG
(Mr. SABLAN asked and was given permission to address the House for 1
minute and to revise and extend his remarks.)
Mr. SABLAN. Mr. Speaker, 50 years ago, President Kennedy observed
that ``the life of the arts, far from being an interruption, a
distraction, in the life of a nation, is very close to the center of a
nation's purpose--and is a test of the quality of a nation's
civilization.''
I ask you to join me today in recognizing Barry Wonenberg, an artist
in the Northern Mariana Islands, who very much embodies the ideal of
which the President spoke, and who, through his avocations as both
artist and educator, has, for more than 20 years, broadened our
community's appreciation of art, creativity, and culture--and
encouraged others to explore, and achieve in, artistic endeavors as
well.
Today, Barry is representing the United States at the 12th
International Sculpture Symposium in Changchun, China. Artists from 96
different countries are creating sculptures there which will be added
to some 500 sculptures already exhibited in that city from previous
symposia. We all watch the progress on the massive clay sculpture Barry
is creating, wish him well, and thank him for representing the Northern
Marianas and America with such distinction.
Fifty years ago, President Kennedy observed that ``the life of the
arts, far from being an interruption, a distraction, in the life of a
nation, is very close to the center of a nation's purpose--and is a
test of the quality of a nation's civilization.'' I ask you to join me
today in recognizing Barry Wonenberg, an artist in the Northern Mariana
Islands who very much embodies the ideal of which the president spoke,
and who, through his avocations as both artist and educator has, for
more than 20 years, broadened our community's appreciation of art,
creativity, and culture--and encouraged others to explore, and achieve
in, artistic endeavors as well.
Barry came to the Commonwealth in 1989 under an artist-in-residence
contract and he initially aided in the design of lesson plans and
textbooks for the local public school system, including the first-ever
Northern Marianas History textbook. Not long thereafter, Barry accepted
a teaching position at Northern Marianas College, where he developed a
ceramics program and has assisted in the development of other arts-
related curricula.
Barry's true passion as an artist, and the area in which he has
inspired most students, though, remains sculpture and pottery--which he
has been crafting for 35 years. As in most cultures around the world,
these arts represent a tangible link to our local historical past. The
mediums also inspire exploration, consideration, and interpretation of
the natural beauty that abounds in our contemporary island environment.
Barry's passion for pottery has led to local and international
distinction. In 2003, Barry was a recipient of the Governor's
Humanities Award in the CNMI. He was celebrated for bringing local
cultural elements of design into the vision of the contemporary artist,
which has aided the preservation of a primary indigenous cultural art.
In 2008, Barry was one of 31 sculptors worldwide invited to
participate in the International Sculpture Symposium in Changchun,
China. His ten-foot-high bronze and stainless steel sculpture has a
permanent place in the Changchun World Sculpture Park, which is home to
hundreds of sculptures from artists around the world. In 2010 he was
again chosen to represent the Northern Mariana Islands at the
Symposium. Out of 1,060 submissions from around the world, 29 artists
were selected to attend the Symposium. Of those 29 artists, four were
chosen to create two works of art each. Barry was one of those four.
Barry's artistic talents have also benefitted our island community in
some very real and significant ways. For example, he joined with others
to transform a underutilized area of our local hospital into a calming
therapeutic garden for psychiatric patients. He also served as an
advisor to a group that worked to apply for, and receive, funding
through NOAA's Prescott Grant Program to engage in a regional study
[[Page H5474]]
of marine mammal stranding, which will include the development of an
interpretive display of the skeletons of marine mammals recovered from
the waters around our islands. In aid of local charitable fundraising
efforts, Barry also regularly contributes his work for auction or
raffle by social service organizations in the Commonwealth.
Today, as a nation, we face challenges to the arts--for both
financial and ideological reasons. I hope that we all consider the
nexus between the arts and our civilization, globally and locally, as
we debate the issues. And I also hope that you will join me in paying
tribute to Barry Wonenberg--who has spent much of his life, to the
benefit of the Northern Mariana Islands, practicing what President
Kennedy preached.
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