Artist ChadMichael Morrisette put 50 mannequins on the roof of his house to make a loud and powerful statement on gun control in America following the horrific tragedy that struck Orlando’s LGBT community over the weekend.

After hearing the news of the mass shooting at gay nightclub Pulse which left over 100 killed and injured on Sunday, Morrisette decided to place a mannequin for each of the persons killed on the roof of his West Hollywood home situated near the intersection of Orange Grove and Fountain avenues.

There’s also a huge sign that reads ’50 Dead People #GunControl.’

‘This affected me so much. I wanted people to see as the biggest shooting in American history, what that might look like, and I have the ability to show them that,’ he told NBC 4.

Morrisette’s dramatic art installation depicting how the scene inside Pulse nightclub might look like after Omar Mateen killed at least 49 people and wounded 53 more is titled ‘No One Is Safe.’

NBC 4 reports that no two mannequins’ expressions or their positions are the same.

‘It doesn’t matter if it’s a church or a movie theatre or a gay club or an elementary school. All of us at this point should be able to relate to it,’ Morrisette who also had his birthday on Sunday said.

‘I don’t care what you say about all this we cannot have 50 Americans killed in a nightclub and continue to do nothing about it.’ This is what 50 dead people looks like. #GunControl pic.twitter.com/6Bq9tuu6vU — ChadMichael (@OhMannequin) June 12, 2016

People are also stopping to take pictures of the roof installation, reports Fox 11, with many praising Morrisette’s artistic expression as impactful, though one passerby said that it was ‘a little extreme.’

Standing on the roof with a Fox 11 reporter, Morrisette explained:

‘As you can see standing up here in the middle of it, it becomes a little more intense when you’re actually stepping over arms and legs.

‘Imagine this was a dance floor, which is where they were.’

Comedian Margaret Cho has posted a snap of the installation on her Facebook page with a moving tribute to the victims of the shooting:

Morrisette hopes the display will lead to important dialogues and change in the future:

‘I hope that we can have some actual change within the legislation about the gun control, about the gun laws, about our access to guns, about mental health, about extremism—about all the factors that relate here.’

Watch his interview with Fox 11 here: