Young Americans

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Jenny T. tipped us off that the stately grand dame of Wallingford, the Good Shepherd Center, figures prominently in a video installation now on display at the Seattle Art Museum:

Young Americans
Video Installation
March 19 – August 30, 2009
SAM Ketcham Forum Gallery

Mary Simpson and Fionn Meade, Northwest artists currently residing in New York, have collaborated on several films in recent years. Young Americans is one of their latest works, filmed primarily at the Home of the Good Shepherd, originally a residential institution for “orphaned and wayward girls” that was built in Seattle in 1907.

Alternating between pensive shots within the empty building, and frenetic but cryptic passages in which a group re-enacts archaic games, the film maintains a provocative mystery through its fragmentation. Narrative clarity is withheld from the viewer but also from the actors as internal struggles for control of the rules and storylines mirror contemporary society’s increasingly fractured interpretation of daily events. Young Americans finds a poetic visual analog to this condition, suggesting that consequently we may all be, in a sense, orphaned and wayward.

We don’t know about you, but we don’t need a poetic visual analog to tell us we’re wayward. We’re wicked wayward.


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Jordan

I started Wallyhood back in 2008, right when my son was born, because I realized I had lived in the neighborhood since 1993 and didn't really know my neighbors. I figured writing a blog about what was going on around me would be a good way to meet people and help other people do the same. As the years progressed, those neighbors have picked up the torch and it is now a group effort, which I adore. I moved out of Wallingford for a few years (2020 - 2025), but I'm back, now living with my wife, son and dog (Dillinger) up in Tangletown.