Witness at the World Trade Center (September/October 2021 | Volume: 66, Issue: 6)

Witness at the World Trade Center

AH article image

Authors: Todd Stone

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

Historic Theme:

Subject:

September/October 2021 | Volume 66, Issue 6

The author painted this image of the attack on the World Trade Center, which he witnessed from his studio in Tribeca.
The author painted this image of the attack on the World Trade Center, which he witnessed from his studio in Tribeca.

Editor's note: Todd Stone is an artist whose watercolors and oil paintings over the last 20 years have examined the destruction of the World Trade Center on September 11, 2001, and the ongoing recovery in Lower Manhattan. A native New Yorker, Todd moved to Lower Manhattan in 1974 and set up shop, showing his work internationally. At the time, his art was primarily abstract, but by 2000 Todd had expanded his practice to include studio scenes, landscapes, and cityscapes, often featuring the World Trade Center. His home and studio were literally in the shadow of the Twin Towers.

My wife and I were in my Tribeca studio on that sunny morning when the first jet roared over our skylight and slammed into the North Tower six blocks away.

My camera was already at the window as I had been photographing the melancholy, rainy rooftops the previous day, and I took my first photograph within seconds of impact as the pigeons were lifting to the sound of the explosion at 8:45. 

When the second tower fell, the studio suddenly flooded with light. I had been living in the shadow of the towers for twenty-two years. But this new light had shadows of its own. 

Shortly after, I was on a neighboring rooftop when the South Tower collapsed in my camera viewfinder. The camera shutter froze as I looked on in disbelief. I ran for my life from the debris cloud but was only dusted as the cloud dissipated as it reached me. 

We thought the attacks were ongoing as explosions continued through the afternoon. There was no electricity or phone service. 

I spent the rest of the day on my rooftop drawing and photographing in a dazed state of confusion until Seven World Trade Center fell at 4:30. 

Todd Stone rendered this depiction of smoke and ash on the Streets of New York City immediately following the attacks on September 11, 2001. (Image courtesy of the artist)
Todd Stone rendered this depiction of smoke and ash on the streets of New York City immediately following the attacks on September 11, 2001. (Image courtesy of the artist)

My family evacuated uptown to 26th Street that night but returned the next day to find our home transformed and unlivable. We needed masks to breathe in our smoke-filled loft. The streets were filled with firemen, disaster workers and crushed vehicles. That night we were again evacuated due to the bomb threat at the Empire State building. 

We hit the street to panicked crowds yelling “run south”. We had just come from the south.

We returned home after four days to what had become ground zero. We lived behind swat team barricades for the