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The Autopsies Research Group at the UCL Object Retrieval Project

12/11/2009

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"Object Retrieval was a mass participation art project that took place from 15-21 October 2009 on a converted Routemaster bus in the main UCL (University College London) Quad on Gower Street, London. A single object from the UCL Pathology Collection was exhibited on the bus and explored by thousands of people from their own personal or professional perspective for 7 days, 24 hours a day. The response was extraordinary as you can see for yourself from the enormous amount of information uploaded on the Object Biography page. Contributions ranged from the hyper-scientific to childhood memories via the Gospels, Jack Kerouac, Psychoanalysis and pretty much everything in between. While Object Retrieval has finished, the website will remain open to your further contributions surrounding this simple object, this toy car that once belonged to a 4 year old boy."

This is the description by the curator and artist of the Object Retrieval Project on the website devoted to the project.

The Autopsies Group took up the invitation to research and think about the little car exhibited in this project.  That car, depicted above and below in photographs taken by Jann Matlock during our work sessions at the Routemaster bus, on 21 October 2009, was a tiny toy car, modelled after the Ford Galaxie Sunliner, that entered the UCL Pathology Collection in 1963 in relation to a case of lead poisoning involving a 4 year-old boy.  The case notes are reproduced here.

In these case notes, that justify the "appropriation" of the object today in the Object Retrieval Project, and its display in the Pathology Collection that originally housed it, the little boy was diagnosed in three ways: as a "case of mental retardation" (possibly relating to his lead poisoning as Rebecca Harrison notes in her contribution), as having "pica"--or the propensity to eat things that were not destined to be eaten--not so much a disease as a symptom, but at the very least an attribute that was part of a strange discourse of blaming victims as both Karolina Kendall-Bush and Harrison dicuss below; and being different, in this case, of "non-European extraction."  Despite our best efforts, we do not know what happened to the child or even whether follow-up studies were done on any of the children studied by Dr. Moncrieff in 1963 about whom he published an article reproduced on the Object Retrieval site.  We do know that this little boy was not one of the specific cases detailed in that study.  We can also assume, from the evidence of his lead poisoning levels, and the diagnosis of severe learning disabilities, that he may not have had the future that other children born in 1959 would today enjoy.  If he is alive today, he would be 50.  In the year that he entered the Greater Ormond Street Hospital, Martin Luther King gave his "I Have a Dream Speech" (on 28 August 1963).  Also that fall, on 23 october 1963, Bob Dylan recorded an important political ballad, "The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll."  That song, which told the story of one of the most tragic injustices of the civil rights era in the U.S., detailed how the scion of wealthy tobacco farmers killed a black woman with his cane because she was slow in bringing him a drink--and then was given the minimal penalty of only six months in jail for manslaughter:

William Zanzinger killed poor Hattie Carroll
With a cane that he twirled around his diamond ring finger
At a Baltimore hotel society gath'rin'.
And the cops were called in and his weapon took from him
As they rode him in custody down to the station
And booked William Zanzinger for first-degree murder.
But you who philosophize disgrace and criticize all fears,
Take the rag away from your face.
Now ain't the time for your tears.

Dylan tells the whole story, in his way, almost as if he's providing a newspaper account of the murder that occurred in February 1963. The version below is from a public domain appearance on the Steve Allen show in 1964.

Zantzinger's story is relevant to the Object Retrieval Project for two reasons: first because his victim, like the little boy in the Object Retrieval Project, was of another background than European and justice was dispensed on the basis of that racial, ethnic difference. Second, because Zantzinger left jail to become a major slumlord in Maryland and in the Washington D.C. area. See this account in The Guardian, (and in some slightly more anecdotal accounts here). 

Arrested in 1991 on charges of fraud and deceptive business practices, Zantzinger was like the slumlords who in the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s, and even today, refused to do anything about the lead paint in the apartments they rent.  He was also like the lead paint companies that have fought tooth and nail all attempts to force them to indemnify their victims for pretending--well into the 1970s--that lead paint was safe and for claiming, even today, that their paint was no more to blame than other things in the environment.  See these examples from Life Magazine: [1] [2] [3] (1967!) Pencils, pottery, and yes, little toy cars, have taken the fall for an industry that has chosen not to participate in the clean-up of the home environments they promised to make sparkling and safe.

William Zantzinger died in January 2009. For a contemporary activist's account of the era, read this.

Tragically enough, in 2009 as well, on July 2, the Rhode Island Supreme Court reversed a legal decision that would have forced the three big lead paint firms to pay to help clean up the housing that their paint has made toxic.  After more than 30 years of hiding the health risks of their lead paint, Sherwin-Williams, NL Industries, and Milennial Holdings were set to begin paying billions to repair the damage to housing where lead paint risks still persist.  Cases are pending in California and Ohio, where courts could still make the lead firms share in the cost of making homes safe.  Until then, justice for the millions of children who suffer from lead paint poisoning, will remain as elusive as for Hattie Carroll.

This is why the Autopsies Research Group played Bob Dylan's song at the end of our research visit to the Routemaster bus in the UCL quad on 21 October 2009.  While we would rather remember 1963 for Martin Luther King's dreams, we also want to remember the injustices committed by slumlords like Zantzinger and by the lead paint companies both of whom profited from little boys such as the one who once loved a little toy Ford Galaxie Sunliner.

Wherever he is, we hope he is not alone.
--Jann Matlock
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Lead Astray--The Irony of It All: Reflections on the UCL Object Retrieval Project

9/11/2009

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The brief medical history that accompanied the Object Retrieval exhibit at UCL stated that the white paint on the car contained no lead traces, while the red paint on the car contained lead at 6%. The notes also tell us that the child in question was "originally admitted two years and three months previously, as a case of mental retardation." 

Was this miniature Ford Galaxie Sunliner really the culprit in the child’s lead poisoning?

Until 1978, when the use of lead was banned in domestic products in the U.S., the metal was prevalent in household paints, plumbing/pipes, gasoline, and pencils (an article in Life from 1972 reveals that ‘pencils, paint and pottery can give you lead poisoning’). Life, "Consumer Watch," June 2, 1972, p.45.

Until 1955 the levels of lead acceptably found in household paints remained as high as 50%. Even in 2004, a U.S. report noted that "Faucets and plumbing fittings may legally contain up to 8% lead." Note that even this lesser percentage of lead exposure is 2% higher than that found in the red toy paint in the 1960s toy of the Object Retrieval Project--paint to which the child’s severe lead poisoning was attributed (ARC, "Child Lead Poisoning Prevention" Report. February 2004). 

Lead poisoning is a cumulative process. In children, who absorb far more of the lead they ingest than their adult counterparts, lead poisoning can have disastrous consequences. In an investigative report into the compensation paid out by manufacturers in cases of lead poisoning, Laura Greenberg describes the effects of exposure to lead on children:

High levels of exposure can cause kidney failure and brain swelling that can lead to coma or death. High exposure can also result in neurological damage, mental retardation, cerebral palsy, seizures, and behavioral problems. Lower levels of exposure can cause reduced IQ, cognitive difficulties, deficits in speech and language processing, attention deficit disorder, and full or partial hearing loss. ("Compensating the Lead Poisoned Child: Proposals for Mitigating Discriminatory Damage Awards"). 

Is medical science missing a trick in laying the blame for the child’s lead poisoning at the much-licked door of the toy car?

The child displayed symptoms of lead poisoning two years and three months before he was admitted for lead poisoning. When he was admitted to Great Ormond Street Hospital, he was characterized as a case of "mental retardation." Could this have been an unacknowledged case of lead poisoning caused by the ingestion of paint from the walls of his home, the water in his formula that ran through the pipe of his house, or the decorative patterns on the containers used to store his food?

Pica was often the diagnosis for children who put objects in their mouths and then showed symptoms of lead poisoning. The diagnosis was an effective way of laying the blame for children’s illness at the door of lower-class, low-income families who could not control their children. (As described by in Jane E. Brody, "Aggressiveness and Delinquency in Boys is Linked to Lead in Bones," New York Times, February 7 1996).

As historian Christian Warren argued:
In most cities, lead poisoning’s status as a disease of poverty left the iceberg submerged. Cultural assumptions about the poor shifted blame from the toxin to the victim, inhibiting the discovery of the true scope of childhood plumbism and postponing indefinitely its eradication (Brush with Death: A Social History of Lead Poisoning [Baltimore, MD: John Hopkins University Press, 2000], 182).

Warren cites lead company shill Robert Kehoe using the fantasmatic language of the medical diagnosis of "pica" to blame children and their parents: "unwanted and unloved," these "children develop aberrant apetites, interests and habits of eating (pica), and tend to deviate psychologically from those with more favourable social and physical environments" ("The Harben Lectures," 1961, cited in Warren, 186). The discourse that attributed the blame to children and their parents repeatedly characterized lead poisoning as the result of the "disease" of "pica"--"when little kids put stupid things in their mouths and eat them" (Dr. Vincent Guinee in NY in the 1970s, cited in Warren, 186).

The little boy of the Object Retrieval Project was therefore implicitly blamed for his own condition by being told he "had" pica. 

This car is therefore, ironically, a manifestation of pica as a misdiagnosis. It signifies how much the fantasy of the disease of "pica" deterred from blaming the lead paint companies themselves. In suggesting the car as a likely source of lead poisoning, one ignores the evidence that the child may have had been suffering over two years before.his admission to the hospital--and maybe long before he ever saw the toy car. Was there any attempt to record his bone lead levels, which would have shown the cumulative level of poisoning, rather than just that immediate to the blood test? The real culprit in the case most likely gets away.

What is striking about the car itself is that all the white, non-toxic paint has been licked off by the child. The red, lead-based paint remains largely intact. The car itself probably has no real place in the poisoning of the child. However we can strip away this outer layer of information to get at the real truth of the case – just as the child did to reveal the worn grey body of his toy.

    --Rebecca Harrison
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