Access: A Feminist Perspective
January 18, 2007- February 10, 2007
Reception: January 20, 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm
547 W 27th St
The
Rhonda Schaller Studio is proud to present
Access: A Feminist Perspective curated by Rhonda Schaller and Dave Jaquish from
January 18 thru February 10, 2007. On display in word and image are 28 contemporary
artists from around the country. Access: A Feminist Perspective will try to add to the
dialogue recognizing women as the great cultural influence they are. You will see in the
list of artists below talents who pay homage to and take inspiration from women past
present and future.
This exhibition explores feminist critique, beginning with work by artists inspired by
women or feminist analysis as pertains to the word "access" and extending to its impact
on subject matter as in the use of territory and place; role models and identity; body parts
and self image; and spiritual commentary and re-gendering.
Using non traditional entries into our sense of place and home, artist
Tasja Keetman’s
“shutters+blinds” is an old window shutter, with a second skin of handmade paper and
flowers covering and revealing the writings of Emma Goldman and other feminists,
emblematizing a love letter, while quite literally blocking or opening the view to the
inside and outside.
Aphrodite Desiree Navab uses humor in her photographs “Super
East-West Woman”, and “Take Off” using her Chador (Farsi for Islamic covering) and
turning it into a cape of freedom, poking fun at herself and her two cultures, and the
ludicrous situations in which her life between East and West has placed her. Doree
Albritton’s biomorphic and transcendental painting “Vision” created in mixed media on
linen, offers us a powerful utopian view of an evolutionary thread, giving birth to a
cosmic passage into a possible future that provides unlimited access for everyone.
Francine LeClercq tells us access to a public restroom is definitely a feminist issue, and
takes the question “is access a feminist issue” to the “potty parity” debate with her
inclusion of a common brown plastic “Women Restroom Sign”, the first appearance of
which, in a male dominated work place, brings a sign of access and accomplishment.
Appreciating landmark women in design such as Anni Albers and Charlotte Perriand,
artist + designer
Jada Schumacher also sites Emily Post and Julia Morgan, Helen
Frankenthaler and Hella Jongerius as role models for the avenues of access they have
forged. Her design hybrid “Orange and Dart Molding” in resin with oranges, challenges
normal roles of décor and utility of objects found in a typical interior.
Carlos Masis uses the female form as a role model of power, depicting actual scenes of
his life, his lost loves, romances, and weakness for a love he never conquered as a source
of inspiration. In “Ferocious Beast at Rest” oil on canvas he wrestles with strong desire
and love lost, and the power and importance women have over him.
Angela Ellsworth,
an interdisciplinary artist with work intersecting drawing, installation and performance,
presents us with Stitch Portraits from a series “I came here because I love you”. Her
delicate and fragile black thread on napkins, often made while on airplanes or road trips,
are a tribute to and a memory of someone missed.
Jacqueline Jrolf looks at access to
role models in her series of works inspired by Hildegard von Bingen. “Reliquary to H
von. Bingen” is terra cotta, reclaimed mink-lined interior, and glass vial. Made in a
stream of consciousness technique that allows the images to be created without conscious
editing, she finds strength in the enigmatic figure sequestered in the beauty and limits of
the cloistered life she chose.
Mare Vaccaro’s elegant “Viper Locket” looks at identity and societal standards of
femininity, what is real or not and the use of adornment. Her striking photographs are
captivating and enigmatic. The object and subject merge as she explores persona
creation, masking techniques and their use by women to garner recognition and empower
their voices.
Nanette Wylde uses freedom from the constraints of identity as the
backdrop for her electronic flipbook “About So Many Things”. White letters on a black
background feature random displays of activities titled “He and She” without bias to
gender. The activities are drawn from the same pool of possibilities, creating a
minimalist soap opera, challenging the mindset the viewer brings to the text.
Cynthia Eardley celebrates the beauty of the ordinary with her hand modeled wall
mounted portrait of a middle aged woman “Untitled”. An intimate archetype of a
contemporary woman, the sculpture is beautiful and pensive, obliquely observing the
viewer with a strength of character and a gentle sadness.
Susan Antonez-Edens’ oil on
canvas portrait “The Woman of the Moors”, shows a woman who walks alone in a stark
world, confident and unafraid, prepared to go it alone and build a new life. Cindy Betzer
Pharis’ portrait of a young teen, comments on social subtleties inherent in our societal
structures. “Redefining Beauty: Savanna, A Mathematical Teen”, created in oil pastel
and ink, links gifted and genius to a redefinition of beauty for teenage girls.
Maya Freelon embraces the transient passage of time while grappling with identity and
authenticity in her abstract wall sculpture in tissue paper and tape: “Historical
Significance”.
Photographer
Amelia M. Falk challenges us to accept the aging process and define
access as permission to communicate beauty without the influence of the media’s
youthful male gaze. She invites us to playfully and soberly revel in the naked body of a
middle aged woman who celebrates life in her joyful nude portrait “I’m told the older I
get, I should wear a bra”. Fiber artist
Karen Maru also raises the issue of who has
access to the sight of a woman’s naked body in her “Body Parts”, where the nude woman
is drawn over and over again on the same fabric and then cut up and sewed back together
in a quilt format. Though her choice to work in the quilt format comes out of sheer
orneriness and a jolt of feminist rage, she successfully raises the issues of what is real art
combined with the politics of the gaze.
Installation sculptor
Susan C. Dessel states that working with ones hands often provides
access to the American way of life, enabling subsequent generations to pursue education
and achieve dreams. In her conceptual piece “Untitled (Honor)” she speaks of the value
and dignity of handwork, pays homage to the invisible immigrant, the house-based work
of women, backbreaking labor of the uneducated, and women’s handwork disdained as
craft. The piece housed in a case, is reminiscent of valuable museum exhibits combining
ruggedness of cement with gauzy femininity of cheesecloth.
Andrea Zemel’s beautiful
hand colored etching “In The Game” is part of a series of works about the character
Herculina, who Zemel created to rise up from the dust of personal history as a chronicle
of woman’s struggle. With a sense of poise and equanimity, Zemel transforms mundane
existence to an Olympian arena; a staging platform for the transformation of soul.
Michi Colacicco builds her work on intuition and completes it with conscious specific
imagery of what her experiences in the world as a woman have taught her. Her
“Untitled”, created with horsehair, pigment, book pages, and mounted on paper, is a
poetic and enigmatic portrait of a young woman in the world. In “Freedom Fighter”
Allison Artis takes us on a journey through the subconscious into inspiration from her
life experiences, using permanent marker, pigment and various oils to create an almost 3-
dimensinal quality to her canvas.
Monique Ford’s images are deeply rooted in her own
feminine identity, but asks shouldn’t the paintings stand alone as images? Her painting
“Jessica” is an oil on canvas, a chromatic portrait of intersecting shapes, beautifully
composed on the rectangle.
Daniela Samovolska-Ovtcharov uses her independent spirit
to create and live in her own world. Based on an original oil painting, her fantasy world
“Tower of Life” is a limited edition of 30 prints on canvas, where she creates something
beautiful and valuable for us to ponder.
Yoon Soo Lee creates paintings that are in spirit
like the Buddhist Mandalas dedicated to meditation. She finds the middle ground
between stillness and movement in her mixed media “practice love #12 ‘ghosts”.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | map | | Address | 547 W 27th St, #529 New York (Chelsea) NY, 10001 United States | | Phone | 212-967-1338 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 11-5 | | | |
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