 Generations. |
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A Place at the Table
Open seating for feminist art
There's nothing so blatantly vaginal as Judy Chicago's
work in the current exhibition at the Ann Arbor Art Center, although
it obviously refers to her controversial feminist masterpiece, The
Dinner Party. Sponsored by the Michigan Women's Caucus for Art
and the Feminist Art Project, the juried show includes works in
various media by Michigan artists and is self-consciously by and
about women. The pieces particularly address women's places
at the table, but which table? Judy Chicago's table? The
political table? The dinner table?
Take Poprah, a high-backed bejeweled chair plastered with small
pictures of previous popes and Oprah Winfrey's smiling face
front and center. It's tempting to read this as yet another
(clichéd) critique of Oprah's sickening fame and ungodly
influence. On the other hand, in light of the exhibition's
theme, it might refer to the censure women endure when they achieve
successes traditionally reserved for men. The chair's glittery,
tacky aesthetic lends itself to either interpretation.
In addition to Poprah, there are several other literal chairs:
a rocking chair hangs from the ceiling, suspended by strips of what
looks like a garish chartreuse T-shirt. Another chair, entirely
decoupaged in photos and magazine clippings with injunctions like
"Express yourself" and "Feminist," reminds me
of projects I did as a teenager.
Generations is a row of three attached seats. The chair on the
right, a child's seat attached at the hip of the center chair,
dangles off the ground, while the chair on the left is simply a
frame with no seat at all. Three photographs on the center seat
portray generations of mothers and daughters. Bookended by a ghostly
frame (a dead grandmother? an absent partner?) and a too-close
kiddie seat, the middle one is the only viable spot for a grown
woman: an apt commentary on the burden of motherhood.
I didn't know what to make of some of the less literal works.
One giant print, Untitled #1 from Life Size and Other Lies Series,
depicts a young blond girl sitting in a fifties kitchen. She wears
a sly inscrutable smile and holds up a large spoon, ready to dig
into a box of Frosted Flakes on the table. Visually, with the
sea-foam-green and carnation-pink kitchen colors and her face as
big as Tony the Tiger's, it's grrrrreat. But I can't
figure out what the hell it means.
I also couldn't understand a piece called Brainstorm (Iraq
War Memorial). The bloody mangled head of a doll sits atop a wooden
stump inside a broken glass box with shards of glass and thick
twisty wires protruding from it as if her thoughts had exploded.
It's certainly violent, but I'm not sure how it relates to
the Iraq War specifically.
Some more subtle but often more powerful works hide in little
nooks around the exhibit. I fell in love with All Tied Up, a simple
contour line drawing of two nude women bandaged to chairs. The use
of bandages instead of ropes or chains suggests broken bones, with
the chairs acting as splints; perhaps it's a sad image of the
figures' symbiotic relationship to oppression. Like the rest
of the exhibition, this piece is up for interpretation through
Sunday, August 10.
Katie Whitney
Photo by Katie Whitney
[Review published August 2008]
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