Rose River Memorial makes its way to Garden Grove
The traveling art installation commemorating hundreds of thousands of lives lost to COVID-19 made its way into Garden Grove.
Last year artist Marcos Lutyens had an idea for a tribute to victims of the pandemic in the form of red felt roses. The result was the Rose River Memorial. It’s one of many memorial exhibits of the same installation that have appeared at the Orange County Museum of Art, Santa Monica, East Los Angeles and the Hollywood Forever Cemetery.
“There was a lot of fear and anxiety and this kind of feeling Western civilization was collapsing,” Lutyens told the Daily Pilot at the OCMA installation opening. “It started dawning on me that this wasn’t going away and that we need to memorialize this.”
Julie Diep, director of the Orange County Autism Foundation, saw the installation and thought it would be a great idea to bring it into Garden Grove.
“There’s so much division in our community with our belief systems, politics or whatever the reason may be, but we are so united in our grief and more importantly we need to be united in the healing,” said Diep.
The foundation sponsored the installation, which was blessed by Bishop Kevin Vann at the opening on Tuesday afternoon at Christ Cathedral Cultural Center. The memorial will be on display at the church’s Small Gallery until June 30. It features 4,600 roses along with stories and photos of those who died from COVID-19.
“When people heal, they go to medical professionals or their counselors,” said Diep. “But their spiritual guides are also a huge part of the process. That’s why we decided to partner up with the Christ Cathedral.”
The installation is scheduled to make its way to Washington D.C. to be part of a larger display for National COVID Memorial Day in March 2022.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.