The Scarlet Cord: Tethered

Tethered - string art for The Scarlet Cord installation

Tethered, Mixed media on plywood, 44 x 48 inches, 2014
(Approximately 700 nails and 600 feet of string)

In India, a teenage prostitute’s baby cries while tethered to a post by a thin scarlet cord. No one is allowed to touch or talk to the baby. Her trafficker’s goal: create the perfect sex slave—a child desperate for affection. Similarly, by using manipulation and deception, pimps enslave American children with a thin psychological tether.

FACT: Cybersex sells children as young as six weeks old for sex to customers in the US (Women At Risk International).

Midnight Wars & The Scarlet Cord

Kelsey Rottiers

Don’t miss singer Kelsey Rottiers’ live performance set against the backdrop of “The Scarlet Cord” ArtPrize installation—confronting the harsh reality of child sex trafficking and calling for compassionate action.

What: Live performances by Kelsey Rottiers
Where: The Scarlet Cord installation at the Ford Presidential Museum
When: Sunday, September 28 at 2:00 pm AND Sunday, October 5 at 2:00 pm

The Scarlet Cord: The Story

Wounded - Part of The Scarlet Cord installation

Wounded, Multi media on canvas, 58 x 96 inches, 2014

Being unwanted, unloved, uncared for, and forgotten by everybody…that is a much greater hunger. Mother Theresa

A thin red cord holds Jenny captive.
The last time Jenny saw her dad she was seven.
Divorce emptied her.
Her cries—no one hears, no one answers.

An older boy tossed her an easy—“I love you.”
She unsuspectingly gets into his car.
The new boyfriend receives a finder’s fee.
Jenny’s worth: $3,200.

Her owner names her Sugar Baby and says, “I’m your daddy.”
She’s groomed by her new daddy, her innocence stolen.
Pornography fuels the business, and fantasy demands the young.
Like most, she is thirteen.

Driven to meet daily quotas, Jenny and her body surrender.
She feels filthy—outside and in.
No one looks her in the eye.
“Unwanted” tattoos her heart.

Her door swings thirty times a night.
With each click of the lock, her young mind tangles.
Fear dictates.
Abuse braids the scarlet cord and tightens Jenny’s tether.

©2014 Watercolorbypamela – All rights reserved.
(The Scarlet Cord is based on a composite of true stories that have been shared in the news or in reports, while others are original stories. A model and pseudonym have been used.)

FACT: There are nearly 2,400 human trafficking victims in West Michigan (Manasseh Project).

Pamela’s ArtPrize 2014: The Scarlet Cord

Pamela's ArtPrize 2014 installation will be featured inside a railway boxcar

Gerald R. Ford Presidential MuseumThe Scarlet Cord
Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum
September 24 through October 12, 2014

As visitors step inside a 40-foot storage container filled with thirty doors, they enter a secret world. This dark world crosses religious and social economic borders to sell our children for sex. A twisting scarlet cord depicts the trauma bond that connects the children to their traffickers. The weathered doors represent these abused children whose youthful minds have become knotted. Pamela’s art—dedicated to these suffering children tethered within the sex industry—calls for compassionate action.

Partnering with Women At Risk International:

Women At Risk International

The Scarlet Cord Radio Interview with Shelly Irwin

Jessica Rowland of Women at Risk International and Pamela during radio interview with Shelly IrwinJessica Rowland of Women at Risk International and Pamela were interviewed yesterday on WGVU’s morning show with Shelley Irwin about child trafficking and The Scarlet Cord at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum during ArtPrize 2014. Opportunities for action such as Scarlet Cord bracelets being given out at ArtPrize to help raise awareness were also mentioned. Listen to the interview below:

Art Around Town

Watercolor paints and brush

Pamela’s official ArtPrize installation will be featured at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Museum. But the following locations will host other works by Pamela:

  • Macy’s and Barnes & Noble • Rivertown Mall in Grandville, Michigan
  • The Harris Building, Ballroom Gallery • 111 S Division • Grand Rapids MI 49503