Navigating Interior and Exterior Forces
Undergirded, by Michelle Mulligan Turn, Turn, Turn, by Priscilla Roggenkamp Strong as Nails, by Clare Murray Adams Agree to Disagree, by Sarah McMahon Breaking Out, by Judith Sterling Perseverance, by Heather Bullach Creativity Killers, by Gail Trunik Sekhmet, by Laura Kolinski-Schultz
By Tom Wachunas
“Freeing
yourself was one thing, claiming ownership of that freed self was
another." - Toni Morrison
"There is
no gate, no lock, no bolt that you can set upon the freedom of my mind." - Virginia Woolf
“A woman is
human. She is not better, wiser, stronger, more intelligent, more creative, or
more responsible than a man. Likewise, she is never less. Equality is a given. A
woman is human.” - -----
Vera Nazarian, The Perpetual Calendar of Inspiration
EXHIBIT: Women
of Resilience / an invitational exhibition featuring 25 women artists, curated
by Priscilla Roggenkamp, Judith Sterling, and Patricia O’Neill Sacha / at
Massillon Museum, 121 Lincoln Way East, downtown Massillon, Ohio / Through
May 23, 2021 - Exhibiting artists include: Clare Murray Adams, Ruthie Akuchie,
Kathleen Browne, Heather Bullach, Sarah Curry, Annette Yoho Feltes, J. Leigh
Garcia, Laura Kolinski-Schultz, Charmaine Lurch, Sarah McMahon, Erin Mulligan,
Michelle Mulligan, Patricia O’Neill Sacha, Mary Kaye O’Neill, Cynthia Petry,
Priscilla Roggenkamp, Judith Sterling, Sylvia Treisel, Gail Trunick, Michele
Waalkes, Gwen Waight, Jo Westfall, Gail Wetherell Sack, Laurel Winters and
Kiana Zigler.
From the exhibit statement: “...Twenty-five
artists have explored a variety of topics in traditional and non-traditional
media. These topics include: personal
empowerment, overcoming barriers, the capacity to recover, acts of strength and
resistance, and healing the world and ourselves… the
need to assert one’s place at the table and in the world continues…this
exhibition reminds us that art remains an important vehicle for activism.
Though the impetus
for this exhibit was to celebrate the centennial of women’s suffrage, the
formal and conceptual scope of the exhibit is substantially broader and more
complex than simply a woman’s right to vote in national elections per se. You
could call this remarkably diverse exhibit a communal incantation, or
invocation of sorts. Here is a calling forth of past and present circumstances,
attitudes, evolutions. It’s a symbolic journey through our culture still so fraught
with vexing challenges to women having and holding a viable place at the table
of human living. Women seeking an equi-table, if you will.
Sekhmet is an
exquisite, lavishly glazed and painted stoneware statue by Laura Kolinski-Schultz.
The piece is named for the powerful ancient Egyptian deity traditionally
represented as a lion-headed woman. She was worshipped both as a ferocious
warrior wreaking punishment on her enemies, and a generous healer – a kind of
patron saint of doctors. In this context, consider her not as a mythological
divinity, but as an earthbound force - a strong-willed woman.
With one eye
swollen shut and the other meeting ours in a piercing stare, Creativity
Killers, by Gail Trunick, is a clay figure of a tormented woman. An
anguished soul. Her flesh is incised with words, cut like so many stab wounds. Vicious
imperatives and judgements. Keep Quiet. You’re Too Old! You’ll never amount to
anything. You’re not talented enough… Words meant to silence a voice. Words uttered
to obliterate dreams. Words too often heard in the patriarchal meritocracy of
our time. Yet words she hears with one eye open.
In Perseverance,
a stunning self-portrait oil painting by Heather Bullach, both of her eyes
are wide open in a look of unflinching determination. The canvas is infused
with red, as if illuminated by a fire close by. A crisis? Unscathed, she
appears to be running, but not in a state of panic so much as with palpable confidence,
out from the confines of the picture plane, toward us and a new destination.
A similar sense of undaunted tenacity is evident
in Judith Sterling’s fused glass and ceramic work, Breaking Out. It’s an
episodic rendering of an escape. A woman is in the process of literally
shattering the ceiling of the glass box that had imprisoned her - the box of
societal biases, assumptions and expectations that can stifle a woman in fully
realizing her identity and potential.
With her intriguing textile piece (handwoven
on a computerized jacquard loom), Agree to Disagree, Sarah McMahon also
presents a boxed-in woman, though not in escape mode. Interestingly, when you
stand within inches of the work, it appears as a vast plane of pixelated
patterns. An abstraction. With more physical viewing distance from the cotton
surface, the woman’s form fully materializes. McMahon’s statement articulates
it brilliantly: “…The computer and body relationship is in fact very
meaningful…digital and analog working together, standing in and overlapping for
the psychological and physical. The imagery here comes down to defining
interior and exterior forces, and how we navigate existence and space as minds
inside a body (a concept that becomes more elusive the more it is pondered:
fragile, squishy bags carrying around an awareness of being fragile, squishy
bags).
I don’t take from
this that women are by definition any more fragile or squishy than men. That’s
just one arguable condition of humanity in general. Other conditions can be
constituted of sterner stuff. Consider Clare Murray Adams’ homage to the
history of strong, influential women in her mixed media work, Strong as
Nails. In the chest cavity of a fabric-sculpted torso is a window – a soul
– through which we see a pile of rusted nails – memories of real work. On the
wall next to this object are image transfers, hung from rusted washers, showing
the faces of 36 accomplished women who collectively have affected human
existence for the better.
The title of
Priscilla Roggenkamp’s impressive fabric and repurposed clothing work – Turn,
Turn, Turn – is a reference to a phrase in the biblical book of Ecclesiastes
(and the Pete Seeger song): “To every things there is a season, a time to
every purpose under heaven.” The 10
dress styles are based essentially on a single form, though with subtle
variations. It’s an evolved sameness that nevertheless speaks to a woman’s adaptability
in roles, duties, and identities amid the the constancy of change, whether consciously
chosen or simply inevitable.
The placement of
Michelle Mulligan’s mixed media Undergirded, on a low pedestal
and directly to the left of Roggenkamp’s much larger work, is particularly
fascinating. A time to every purpose under heaven indeed.
Mulligan’s piece is
a small upright book, it’s thick pages exposed just enough so we can read her hand-printed
meditations, along with an anatomical image of a human heart. The book’s cover
is intricately sewn with ornamental doilies and pieces of colored fabric. This intimate, charming tome seems to be at
once a mother’s diary and prayer book, containing innermost reflections from the
heart of a woman of faith, a lover of God and family.
Turn, turn, turn.
I’ve mentioned only some of the many impactful works in this exhibit. There’s
much that I continue to process on emotional and psychological planes. These
artists’ timely visions, articulated with compelling skill, have left me
alternately humbled, dismayed, exhilarated, alarmed, thrilled, mesmerized. And
forever…grateful.
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