
Legacy Artist & Founder of Project 911UP. Shown the first day she saw the Slurry Wall Concrete on a frosty day in Northampton, PA, December 16, 2010. She came prepared with many different cameras to record history and dressed in her favorite North Face coat that has traveled all over the world from 2004 to present day. She was alone with the 8 ton blocks, using Bluetooth switches photographing herself. San is an acclaimed American legacy artist and sculptor who transforms authentic pieces of Ground Zero history into powerful national memorials. Based in St. James City, Florida, she is the only artist commissioned to sculpt original concrete sections salvaged from the 7-story underground slurry wall (the ``Bathtub``) that surrounded the World Trade Center twin towers. Through her vision, these 16,000-pound artifacts are turned into breathtaking historical monuments, allowing people across the country a tactile space to heal, reflect, and remember.
Born in 1956 and raised in Indiana, Sandra developed a deep appreciation for Midwestern values, community solidarity, and American sense of pride and appreciating history. Her father Steve Orosz was a stone mason, expert bricklayer and a concrete finisher. Sans’ mother Millie, was a talented musician that couldn’t read a note music but played piano and guitar by ear, wrote her own songs and sang them too. It’s no wonder San is working with stone and concrete today like her father. He used to also paint in oils in his workshop in their basement, all the while yelling at San and her siblings to stop running around with their dog Barney above his head so he could paint in peace!
The catalyst for Sandra’s historical work occurred just two days after September 11, 2001. Stuck in a slow-moving traffic jam while driving from Florida to Indiana due to national airspace grounding, she observed the surrounding roadside materials and infrastructure. Seeing hundreds of concrete pipes, lined up on the side of the roadway, reminded her of a spine’s vertebrae. The traffic was almost vascular, moving along at a slow and steady pace reminiscent of blood flow. At that moment, San knew she needed to make 9/11 memorials to represent the flow of moving forward at a steady pace. The concrete represented the backbone of our nation and the movement of steady traffic as our life blood which must move always move forward towards a healing for our nation.
In 2007, she debuted her first concrete monument prototype at the World of Concrete in Las Vegas. Her concept evolved entirely in 2010 when she partnered with IMPACT ENVIRONMENTAL to rescue 17 massive sections of the original World Trade Center slurry wall, officially launching Project 911UP.
Sandra’s sculptures have established a nationwide circle of remembrance, bridging the geographical gap for millions of Americans who may never visit New York, Virginia, or Pennsylvania. Each piece utilizes the literal foundation of the Twin Towers to foster localized healing.
Sandra believes that public art should directly support history. To ensure future generations can access these chapters of American history, Project 911UP pledges 12% of all proceeds divided amongst the three primary national sites:
1. The National 9/11 Memorial & Museum (New York City, NY)
2. The National Pentagon Memorial (Washington, D.C. area)
3. The Flight 93 National Memorial (Shanksville, PA)
“Everyone has the right to heal through the experience of seeing and touching these memorials. It’s about positive hope and rebuilding our spirits as a people and a nation.” — Sandra Priest
San has created a positive message of moving up and forward after this great tragedy, into the rebuilding of our lives. Whether you choose a piece already completed or have us create a design for you, we at Project 911UP look forward to working with you. Contact San’s studio today, 239-269-5733, to answer any questions you might have about the details relating to having a sculpture for your public venue.