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Excavating Culture
Brattleboro Museum & Art Center
Brattleboro, VT
May I I - November 3, 1996
Who we are as people is shaped by our relatives. Their world views
and experiences affect us, even though we may never have met them.
The word "culture" describes the characteristic way we
and our community express ourselves -- socially, intellectually,
and artistically. Every artist undertakes a quest for identity, searching out the
styles, subjects, and materials that best reflect who he or she
is. The exhibition Excavating Culture comprises
the work of four artists who reach into their cultural backgrounds
to explore a rich vein of expression. Using the tools of contemporary
awareness, they may unearth the painful impact of racism or trace
feminist footsteps back to earlier signs of women's empowerment.
Some create a new context for established images, and others revitalize
traditional materials. Although JOSE MORALES was born in New York City,
his parents came from Puerto Rico. Periodic trips to visit relatives
who remained on the Caribbean island heightened his sense of disjuncture
between a densely populated, grey, urban world and the lush vegetation
and intense colors of Puerto Rico's rural communities.
He titled the monumentally scaled painting of chickens El Vivero,
which is Spanish for "the vivarium," a place for
keeping and raising living animals. His memories of going with his
grandmother to a poultry market in the south Bronx inspired this
image. When I look at his depiction of the frenzied vitality of
the fowl confined within cramped cages, I think of the vigor of
life in Manhattan's crowded tenement buildings. Morales -- a masterful
painter who seems to dance his images into being with quick, sure,
animated gestures -- conveys the frantic, pulsing energy of the
chickens with active brushwork that encourages quavery threads of
paint to drizzle down the flat surface of the canvas. The fiery
glow of the interior of the cages seems to hint at the sealed fate
of the unfortunate creatures. Morales lives in Spanish Harlem, home to an ethnically diverse
community. In The Kiosk the painter describes such familiar
neighborhood sights as a taco stand, a Korean grocery, and a fire
escape. He favors a dreamlike space in this painting, in which an
impassive cat stares directly at us and a body stretches out ambiguously
on the sidewalk. Like that of many young people born and raised in the People's
Republic of China, HUNG LIU's life was disrupted
during the turbulent years of the Cultural Revolution (1966-76).
After the death of Mao Zedong, she finally was able to study art
and was schooled in the realist style that was sanctioned by the
authoritarian government. After leaving China in 1984 to do graduate
work in the United States, she decided to settle permanently in
California. While Liu's American work reflects her earlier training in representational
art, it reveals a new freedom of paint application, an unfettered
range of subjects, and novel treatments of established images. In
Black Hand, for example, she presents her variation of
a centuries-old Chinese acupuncture diagram depicting the human
form. The canvas itself takes the shape of a venerable gold-leafed wooden
sculpture of Buddha's head in A Third Eye. On his forehead,
where in Indian art a "third eye" is sometimes shown,
the artist depicts herself looking directly forward, as in a passport
photo. By contrast, the Buddha has an inward expression, with downcast
eyes. In traditional Chinese art, the spot on the forehead likely
would be marked by a crystal, indicating Buddha's special mental
abilities. To me, Liu's startling mix of images suggests that she
has personalized the ancient religious heritage, officially disparaged
during the Cultural Revolution, and here partakes of Buddha's great
knowledge by embodying it. Liu addresses the history of Sino-American relations in Wasp,
which paraphrases an old racist cartoon. When Chinese laborers flocked
to California during the boom years of the last century, their presence
sparked fears of unemployment and unfair competition. On the left
side of the original cartoon, the "Chinese trade monopoly"
is personified by an oriental demon with hands in every trade, shown
usurping the place of American-born workers. On the right side,
the cartoonist illustrated the consequences of unemployment with
a group of out-of-work Californians watching as one of their fellows
is taken into custody for delivery to San Quentin. Liu brings the
subject of cheap Chinese labor into the present by adding to her
depiction of the cartoon Garfield the Cat, whose image currently
adorns countless consumer goods made in China for sale in the U.S. MAUREEN McCABE grew up in an intergenerational
family in Quincy, Massachusetts, not far from the site of the Salem
witch trials. Her grandmother had been a toddler when she left Ireland
in the 1870s, so it was Maureen's great aunts and great uncles who
helped teach Maureen about their Irish cultural legacy. Her great
grandfather had been a stone mason in the old country, and her great
uncle's made many of the stone walls in and around Boston. Stone is a favored material and source of inspiration in McCabe's
own work. She assembles images and objects against a background
of slate, a rock that traditionally was used for blackboards and
roofing tiles. Her interest in ancient Irish art and cosmology took
her to her ancestral island. There she photographed the huge prehistoric
stones, or megaliths, that are found in Ireland's ancient burial
sites and made rubbings of their mysterious markings, then translated
these images into her Irish Series assemblages. In most of the works in this series, she miniaturizes an individual
megalith and inserts its shape at a slight angle into a sheet of
slate. Decorative markings relate to the meaning of the ancient
stones. In Newgrange K18, for example, a ladder leads our
eyes from the tiny version of the megalith to its actual location
on a map of ancient graves. A reliquary-like glass crystal houses
a sample of dirt from the site. When McCabe discovered that designs such as spirals, sun discs,
and chevrons were present in both Irish and Native American Hopi
art, she created a group of works that celebrate this coincidence.
Macha 9 with Horses was completed after a recent two-month
residency in Ireland. It was her feminist interest in legendary
women that prompted her to address Macha, a Celtic goddess who could
run as fast as the wind. According to legend, Macha was pregnant
with twins when her husband compelled her to race against the king's
horse. After she won, she gave birth and then perished, cursing
the men of Ulster to suffer as she had. McCabe inscribes the slate
with the phrase ces noindhen, or "the difficulty of
nine," the words of Macha's malediction. To the artist this
queen of Northern Ireland and mother of twins can serve as a metaphor
for "the troubles"--the fratricidal conflicts that continue
to beset Ireland. Although MARIE WATT was raised in the Northwest,
on the outskirts of Seattle, her family is Native American Seneca.
Her mother was brought up on the Cattaragus reservation in upstate
New York, where many of her relatives still live. She developed
a great appreciation for the hand-crafted Iroquois objects that
were passed down through her family. Following a university education
and work at several museums, Watt entered graduate school in painting
to focus on her own work. Regarding her approach to art, she has said, "I do not separate
art-making from other life activities. Sometimes I think this has
a lot to do with the fact that creativity is a tradition in our
communities and that there is no word for 'art' in our native languages.
My paintings do not have sacred-turned-popular-culture emblems which
allow them to be associated with stereotypical American Indian art.
The result of this choice means confronting and challenging perimeters
of interpretation, especially those which tend to authenticate what
an Indian artist is or should be." With such role models as the artist Eva Hesse, who pioneered the
use of uncustomary materials for sculpture, Watt began working with
corn husks, remembering the traditional Seneca corn husk dolls and
masks of her childhood. Handling the natural fiber, she developed
an awareness of the husk's delicate and fragile yet strong and resilient
nature. To Watt the corn husk is a skin, a protective shelter, and
a robelike cover. Her work reflects these insights in multiple ways.
Descend, for example, takes inspiration from the actual
cell structure of corn, in which a modular brick shape forms the
basis of a landscape image. In several small, hand-sized objects that resemble pounders, pods,
and wands, she wrapped actual husks around a wire or cloth armature
to create evocative and diminutive sculptures. The large piece Waterfall
also employs husks, here pressed into service as the painting surface.
In this image of passage and transition from the sky to the ground,
the artist sees an allusion to the traditional Seneca creation story.
According to this tale, Sky Woman fell through a hole in the sky,
bringing seeds and civilization to an earth surrounded by water. Although their cultural identities are distinct, each of the artists
in Excavating Culture daily faces the
challenge of determining how to tap the rich expressive sources
that are his or her birthright. JUDITH E. STEIN, PHD
Guest Curator, Excavating Culture
Exhibition of Excavating Culture is
made possible by the generous support of THE THOMAS THOMPSON TRUST.
Works are on loan courtesy of the
artists,unless otherwise noted. Dimensions are height by width by
depth, in inches.
HUNG LIU
A Third Eye, 1993
oil on canvas, oil on wood, 91 x 55 x 3
Wasp, 1988
oil on canvas, acrylic diptych, 72 x 96
Black Hand, 1995
oil on canvas 96-1/4 x 60; all works courtesy Steinbaum Krauss Gallery,
New York City
MAUREEN MCCABE
Macha 9 with Horses, 1996
mixed media on Bangor blue slate, 16 x 19 x I
Irish/Hopi with Mary's Dice, # 12 Irish Series,
1990
mixed media on slate, 15 x 17 x 2
Irish/Hopi with Protective Powder, #14 Irish
Series, 1990
mixed media on slate, 15 x 17 x 2
Irish/Hopi, #11 Irish Series, 1991
mixed media on slate, 15 x 17 x 2
Double Spiral, # 16 Irish Series, 1990
mixed media on slate, 15 1/4 x 17 x 2
Equinox, #5 Irish Series, 1989
mixed media on slate, 17 x 18 x 2
Spoon/Ballinvally, #15 Irish Series, 1990
mixed media on slate, 13 x 13 x 2
Spirals of the Stars, #8 Irish Series, 1989
mixed media on slate, 19 x 20 x 2
Zig Zags, Four Knocks, #10 Irish Series, 1990
mixed media on slate, 15 x 17 x 2
Newgrange K18, #6 Irish Series, 1989
mixed media on slate, 15-3/4 x 15-3/4 x 2
JOSE MORALES
El Vivero, 1993
oil on canvas, 84 x 216
The Kiosk, 1993
oil on canvas, 80 x 66
MARIE WATT
Waterfall, 1996
corn husk, approx. 82 x 96
Corn husk objects:
Pounder forms, 1995, sizes vary
Pod, wand, and "buried" forms, 1996,
sizes vary
Swell, 1996
corn husk, 2 x 6
Descend, 1995-96
walnut ink on gessoed linen 70 x 96
Overlapping Relationships, 1996
corn husk and mixed media 18 x 26
Plow, 1996
handmade artist's book, 6 x 26 (open dimensions)
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