In the field just below the Atheneum in the charming town of New Harmony, Indiana, you'll find a surprising display: a partial circle of about 20 mysterious concrete shapes.
This is "A Healing Palindrome," one of the largest installations of Kcymaerxthaere, a global work of multivalent storytelling by artist and Geographer-at-Large Eames Demetrios. The artwork was commissioned in 2014 by New Harmony for the town's bicentennial.
On the concrete forms, you can read—or piece together—the story of Gevrian Melam, who was left for dead when he was washed ashore in a flood. You see, he was one of Kcymaerxthaere's biologically aquatic peoples who lived in a river so teaming with oxygen vents, they could simply breathe the water. But, washed ashore high and dry, he was presumed dead.
So, as was their tradition, his brethren made a palindrome of their words, bruised them and hurled them ashore, hoping that the healing energy would save Gevrian. And it did—the rest of the story you can find here on the grounds of the Atheneum in New Harmony. And, as with all the Kcymaerxthaere sites, you'll find parts of the story in other parts of the world.
There are lots of beautiful walks to be taken in and around the town (or you can rent a gold cart). Two of America's major experiments in communal living, one secular and one religious, occurred here. By choosing Kcymaerxthaere for the beginning of their next 200 years, the people of New Harmony were opting to celebrate possibilities once more.