Thanks for the link. It was a good read and the photos are starkly beautiful.
This topic is a personal one for me, being raised during that Cold War and, as a navy brat, always near the center of a potential nuclear blast. In fact, we never did the drills and hid under our desks because it was obvious that we were in the zone that would be largely vaporized.
Years later, in the early-1970s, I am in the US army and found myself stationed in Europe as a guard of a Nike-Herc missile site. Half of the rounds were nukes and I got up close and personal to them as part of my guard duties. I didn’t spend much time pondering their role in a conflict, instead, compartmentalizing that just like I did growing up near one ground zero after another. However, there was an anxiety that was established that I didn’t work through until a decade or so ago.
As a result of that, when I was considering a theme for my senior art exhibition (part of completing my BFA last year) I decided to use those civil defense maps that showed the rings of destruction from ground zero as inspiration. My entire show consisted of works (collage, drawing, painting, photography, mosaic) with concentric circles as the common shapes that moved from “Circles of Destructions” to the theme title “Circles of Construction.” Should you want to take a look, the catalog of the show is here:
http://www.codecooker.com/projects_visual_arts/index.php?f=image_catalog