Saturday, March 25, 2006

I just sold a painting!


Kathy Gallegos just brought over a nice woman who had seen a copy of the "Internal Contrasts" card over at Chico's, the little Mexican restaurant on Avenue 50 and Figueroa. The owner liked the card and had put it under the glass on one of the tables, where Cristina saw it and liked my work. Nice to have follow-up four months after a show! A pleasure to sell work this way. The piece is called "untitled (terra cotta)" -- acrylic on spun polyester.

"Intimate Geography" card and artists


The cards for the show just came back from the printer! We open in two weeks. I have enjoyed working on this show, and I really like the work of all the artists who are participating. Here is the text of the press release describing it:

“Intimate Geography – Getting To Know a Place,” a group show curated by Deborah Thomas and Linda Anne Hoag, offers a collection of imaginative and personal perspectives on how one relates to a particular locale. One goal of the show, which was germinated during a series of conversations between Thomas and Hoag about landscape painting and mapmaking, is to strip away assumptions and conventions about how people locate themselves. The invited artists share a willingness to explore one-of-a-kind encounters with specific locations. Each offers a unique vision:

Edith Abeyta invites viewers into an arrestingly literal archeological scenario by constructing a fanciful neighborhood scavenger hunt in which she fabricates, hides, and maps the locations of small, earthenware plates bearing a bitten imprint of her mouth and teeth.

Daniel Marlos similarly engages the theme of navigation through space in his project “Off on a Tangent” by means of an attractive mix of the conceptual and the personal. A photographer and quiltmaker, Marlos locates and records the appearance of arrows, commonly found in the signage along his usual route to work. His subliminal purpose, however, is to play with directionality in photographic streetscapes, in the gallery, and – in a revealingly tangential yet intimate moment – in the design of a colorful and intricately crafted handmade quilt.

Thomas and Hoag’s piece “Pilgrimage” also maps a personal journey, this time from a cognitive perspective. The organizing thread of this memory map of Los Angeles was dictated by the route Hoag took as she set out to revisit particular locations of past significance during a planned, day-long walk from her current home in Cypress Park to the house where she grew up in West Hollywood. Fragments of maps, old photographs, personal text and miscellaneous memorabilia juxtaposed in the piece reconstruct Hoag’s childhood; recollections of the past were triggered by hints revealed on city streets as they exist today.

Shifting the focus from the personal to the environmental, works by Jennifer Murphy and Deborah Thomas engage viewers to consider the impact of contradictions between nature and technology. Murphy designed a virtual quilt by painting spam phrases – the meaningless yet sometimes poetic linguistic garble that subverts cyber-mapping by slipping through e-mail filtering systems – on leaves gathered locally. Thomas’s shower curtain covered with minute landscape photographs taken in and around the Arroyo Seco water table engages the viewer both to look closely and intimately at the images and to consider questions of water rights in local and personal contexts.

In celebration of Earth Day of April 22, poets Laurel Ann Bogen, Jerry Garcia and Linda Anne Hoag and the musical trio Texere will also read and perform at the gallery at 7 p.m. Bogen, Garcia and Hoag are Los Angeles poets who, in the words of Hoag, “share a lineage” and whose work often considers and engages with the place they live. Texere (from the Latin, meaning “to weave, to twine together, to compose”) is a group of three women composers from Northeast Los Angeles who weave together traditional and original music to create a rich aural tapestry of strings and voices.

Free to the public. Details available at info@ArroyoArtsCollective.org or call 626 794-3627.

The Acorn Gallery is located at 135 N. Avenue 50 in Highland Park, between Figueroa Street and the Gold Line tracks. From downtown Los Angeles, take the 110 Freeway (Avenue 53 exit, then left on Figueroa). From the Valleys, exit the 134 Freeway at Figueroa going south, then turn right on Avenue 50. Street parking.

Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Matrilineage and family archeology


Now that I have a blog, I can document a few projects already completed as well as add information on new projects as they comes along. One of the most personally satisfying projects I completed in 2005 was a virtual quilt I made for a Day of the Dead show called "Ofrendas/Offerings."

Since my mother died in November, 2004, I have been traveling back and forth from Los Angeles to Pittsburgh in order to sort out and prepare my parents' house for sale. Yesterday I returned from my seventh recent trip to Pittsburgh -- each trip has lasted for at least a week, during which time I have pulled things out of closets and drawers and sorted what was meaningful from what was meant for the trash. My mother was a hoarder, and while she kept many things of interest, she used no storage system beyond the chronological (kind of like the Bibliotheque Nationale, which archives its holdings by acquisition date!) During this sorting out process, I stumbled on century-old family photographs in the midst of used wrapping paper and therefore have been forced to go through everything in the house item by item, for fear of throwing away irreplaceable treasures simply by not examining the contents of every box and used paper bag stashed in the closets and storage areas.

Getting back to the virtual quilt and my discovery of the photos that led to its creation -- Were they hidden? Stashed away and forgotten? Simply misplaced? The album included a collection of photos taken c. 1920, in and around the farm my grandmother grew up on in western Pennsylvania. Most compelling for me -- there were many pictures of my grandmother, whom I barely remember. (She died when I was three.) I had never been able to form a coherent impression of my grandmother, and these photos allowed me for more or less the first time to get to know her by means of my own powers of observation. Her reputation in the family was one of crankiness, probably due to the fact that she suffered a series of strokes during the years before she died, leaving her with an expressionless face, an impaired range of movement, and a difficult daily existence. The "Nana" I discovered in these pictures had a warm smile, a relaxed and gracious demeanor, and an obvious love for animals and children. I have also sent her photo to Edith Abeyta's blog, imissyouphotos.blogspot.com, which is an art project consisting of a collection of photos of women who are missed.

Text accompanying the installation of "Matrilineage":

This simulated quilt is composed of digitally reproduced family photos and a brightly colored baby quilt made for me by my great-grandmother. Five generations of women in my family are represented in this quilt/offering: my great-grandmother, who made the original quilt, my grandmother, my mother, my daughter, and me.

While cleaning out my mother’s house after her death last November, I discovered two suitcases full of family photo albums and photographs that I had never seen before. A number of the photos include my maternal grandmother, Ella Elizabeth Firestone Brooks, who died when I was two. Creating the “quilt” has provided me with the opportunity to sift through photos, memories and feelings, and has helped me especially to get to know and appreciate my grandmother, whom I barely remember.

Ellie, as she was called, was born at the turn of the twentieth century on a farm in Springfield, Pennsylvania, “up the mountain” on Chestnut Ridge, the last ridge of the Appalachians before they flatten into Ohio. She spent her childhood on the farm, where she worked hard helping her mother. To her deep regret, she was pulled out of school prematurely to care for her baby brother Clarence. Soon after, she married my grandfather Hess Lewis Brooks, who grew up on a neighboring farm. When Hess got a job, they moved to town. They had four children --Raymond, Madeline, Gladys (my mother), and Jack – between 1917 and 1934.

My only personal memory of Nana is of standing next to her at about knee-level, a toddler and a stroke victim learning to climb stairs together. Just a few weeks before she died in 1954 she gave me a puppy, Tiny, for Easter. She thought that I should have a puppy because I didn’t have any brothers or sisters. In many of the photos I found of Nana she is interacting with animals or surrounded by family. She was visibly fond of a horse she cared for as a teenager; cats and dogs were daily companions. Three generations later, my daughter also loves the company of animals. My grandmother became a mother at a very early age and appears to have been delighted by her children as well.

Nana showed a particular radiance and grace in many of the pictures I discovered, often in quite ordinary settings – on Sunday outings with her family, feeding the chickens, doing the laundry. Even after she left the farm, her life was shaped by work – she cooked and kept a meticulously clean house, took in boarders during the Depression, and studied to be a practical nurse during the 1940s. She and my grandfather shared an affectionate and devoted relationship until she died at 54 following a series of strokes.

I also included the following verse from "Ash Wednesday", a poem by T.S. Eliot, which especially resonated for me at the time I made the piece:

Because I know that time is always time
And place is always and only place
And what is actual is actual only for one time
And only for one place
I rejoice that things are as they are. . . .”

Sunday, March 12, 2006

"Intimate Geography" and completion of shower curtain piece

After discovering two interesting artist blogs (Judy Coates Perez's www.judyperez.blogspot.com and Edith Abeyta's www.imissyouphotos.blogspot.com) I decided to take the plunge and start my own. Linda Hoag and I are curating a show to open April 8 at the Acorn Gallery in Highland Park called "Intimate Geography -- getting to know a place." She and I have been brainstorming for several years on various creative topics, and this is our most ambitious project to date. In addition to curating the show, we are contributing artwork and poetry. So far, I have completed one of two mixed media pieces for the show. It is called "Arroyo Seco Watershed and Surrounding Area," and consists of a transparent shower curtain hung from an elliptical shower curtain rod (from the gallery ceiling) covered with tiny landscape photos that include water.
I have been shooting landscape photos randomly for several years, and most of the photos I chose for this piece were taken last winter during the torrential rains that hit Southern California after Christmas. Normally there is very little visible water along the Arroyo Seco (logical!), but last year was different. I am also very interested in landscape theory, and this project plays with that a little. The original purpose of "views" or picturesque landscapes was to document locations in ways useful to their owners. Oddly enough, the water system in Altadena, where we live, is structured in such a way that water users become shareholders in various water companies. Michael and I, as stockholders of Lincoln Avenue Water Company, are therefore de facto "owners" of Arroyo Seco water. There aren't a lot of words in this piece, but I guess viewers can look at the images and come to their own conclusions about water usage, politics and the environment.