50 research outputs found
Leonora Carrington: âwild cardâ
The âArtists in Exileâ surrealist group portrait of 1942 arguably marks a moment of recognition and inclusion for Leonora Carrington as well as, paradoxically, her moment of âexoticizationâ and temporary exclusion from Anglo-American criticism at large. The existing literature on Carrington is already unfairly weighted towards her early career in the late 1930s and early 1940s, when indeed she would go on to produce radical and challenging paintings, sculptures, novels, tapestries, plays, set designs and costumes well into her nineties. So why another reading of Carringtonâs wartime output? For one, it is useful to present a clearer timeline of her movements and locations, and secondly, it is necessary to review her intermedial contributions to the surrealist magazines of this period. This paper will propose that Carrington was, in fact, at the heart of the avant-garde during this period, a point which has provided fertile ground for future-feminist revisionary commentaries such as Marina Warner, as well as more recent historiographies and creative reinterpretations by Lucy Skaer. A reconsideration of Carringtonâs output from this wartime interlude in New York City, including her short story âWhite Rabbitsâ (1941) and her Untitled etching for VVV Portfolio (1942), provides insights into her instinctual avant-garde senses of liminality and transgression as well as evidencing the profound respect and acknowledgement her peers held towards her. McAra shared an earlier version of this research at the Biblioteca Nacional de MĂ©xico on the occasion of Carringtonâs centenary (6 April 2017) organised through the Leonora Carrington Estate
Witch milk: Samantha Sweetingâs lactation narratives
This illustrated paper explores embodied storytelling in the work of interdisciplinary artist Samantha Sweeting (b.1982). Sweetingâs work is characterised by reference to biblical Madonna and child imagery, nursery rhymes and fairytales e.g. Perraultâs âDonkeyskinâ which Sweeting visually rewrites from a feminist standpoint. In 2007-2011, Sweeting produced a controversial body of work in which she allowed various animals to suckle directly from her breasts. With reference to the legacies of French feminist theory (especially Kristeva and Cixous), I argue that Sweeting corporealises the fairytale in a way that opens it up to contemporary debates around the maternal body as a political site
Emmaâs navel: Dorothea Tanningâs narrative sculpture
In her critical essay, âSome Parallels in Words and Picturesâ (1989), the American artist and writer Dorothea Tanning (1910-2012) noted a literary dimension to her enigmatic soft sculpture âEmmaâ (1970). With explicit reference to Gustave Flaubertâs protagonist Madame Bovary (1857), Tanning, a voracious reader, fabricated her own Emma. I use âEmmaâ to tug at the late surrealist/postminimalist crux in order to reposition Tanning in a more theoretical context. In particular, âEmmaâ can be read through Mieke Balâs intertextual notion of the ânavel of the textâ (2001). Tanning, in turn, can be said to embody Flaubertâs contradictory character as a form of âautotopographicalâ critique (Bal, 2002). This chapter, therefore, presents a methodological model for art historical and literary analysis, contributing to the growing body of research on underrepresented feminist-surrealist artists. The essay volume, edited by Patricia Allmer, was reviewed favourably by Dr Christine Conley in Racar 42 and mentions this chapter specifically: âCatriona McAraâs criss-cross reading of Dorothea Tanningâs soft sculpture Emma, 1970, with the literary character Emma Bovary positions the sculpture as an intermedial visual object that evokes, in its material specificity, the fetishization of the female character in Gustave Flaubertâs novel and the navel as (maternal) signifier. As an example of Mieke Balâs âtheoretical objectâ or an art âthat thinks,â Tanningâs Emma disrupts modernist and surrealist codes of femininity and art makingâ (2017, 91)
A nonagenarian virago: quoting Carrington in contemporary practice
This chapter explores long-term research on Leonora Carrington and contemporary art. A magpie for such âdebrisâ herself, Carrington reaches us imbued with meaning, and it is striking how younger generations of artists have responded to her legacies. The chapter presents the findings of a related research exhibition curated by McAra at Leeds Arts University, Leonora Carrington/Lucy Skaer (15 July-2 September 2016). Here experimental media and performance objects were juxtaposed with Carringtonâs primary material of paintings and etchings. In the hands of this subsequent artistic generation, âCarringtonâ was summoned through the metaphor of a curated, collective sĂ©ance. For example, her novel The Hearing Trumpet (1976) became the starting point for a dialogic performance by Lynn Lu and Samantha Sweeting (2011) in which secret stories are gathered and whispered. Their version of the âantiqueâ hearing trumpet was displayed as a conceptual heirloom. In 2006 Lucy Skaer embarked on a trip to Mexico City where she encountered the elderly Carrington. Their coexistence caused Skaer to make a body of work in and through âCarrington,â including a 16mm film homage Leonora: The Joker (2006). After Carrington passed away, Skaer returned to Mexico and took a series of photographs of Carringtonâs front door, Harlequin is as Harlequin Does (2012). The exhibition was reviewed by Corridor 8, Art Monthly, and State of the Arts. McAraâs research on the quotation of âCarringtonâ as a medium occurred at a timely moment around the centenary of Carringtonâs birth. McAra was invited to Mexico City to present on this research, and subsequently as keynote speaker at Edge Hill University. The essay collection McAra co-edited with Jonathan Eburne has been reviewed by Times Literary Supplement, London Review of Books, The Burlington Magazine and Womanâs Art Journal. It is used on courses including senior honours âWanton Women Dada/Surrealismâ at Royal Holloway University
Glowing like phosphorus: Dorothea Tanning and the Sedona western
In the mid-1940s, Dorothea Tanning and Max Ernst left the urbane, avant-garde circles of Manhattan to build a house and studio in the then remote Southwestern outpost of Sedona, Arizona. Many have written of Ernstâs fascination with indigenous artefacts but there was another pop cultural format that emerged concurrently with their time in Sedona: the genre of the Hollywood Western. Indeed, films like John Wayneâs Angel and the Badman (1947) and Johnny Guitar (1954) starring Joan Crawford were filmed in the immediate vicinity, amidst the iconic red rock landscape. Tanningâs topographical mapping of the desert, as found in paintings such as Self-Portrait (1944), Evening in Sedona (1976), and novella Chasm: A Weekend (2004), feature some of those same scenic locations used as the backdrops in the Sedona Western. Comparisons between the self-presentation of Tanning and the actor Gail Russell are striking especially when one considers Tanningâs own performance in Hans Richterâs film 8 x 8 (1957). Moreover, the feminine, âphosphorusâ glow, which Tanning recurrently uses in her painting and writing to describe the appearance of her female characters, matches the typical costuming of the lead women in Westerns, for example Russellâs Penny and Crawfordâs Vienna. This article explores the complex role the Sedona Western played in the surrealist art and literature made during Ernst and Tanningâs Sedona period and beyond, particularly in terms of gender politics. In order to rethink this moment of âWestern surrealism,â I offer a Tanning-centric perspective through methodological use of Mieke Balâs feminist âautotopographyâ (2001). Research involved site visits to Sedona, and archival research at The Dorothea Tanning Foundation in New York. Based on this research, I was invited to give a public lecture at the Sedona Arts Center (January 2020)
ROTOĐŻ Review
The ROTOĐŻ partnership between Huddersfield Art Gallery and the University of Huddersfield was established in 2011. ROTOĐŻ I and II was a programme of eight exhibitions and accompanying events that commenced in 2012 and was completed in 2013. ROTOĐŻ continues into 2014 and the programme for 2015 and 2016 is already firmly underway. In brief, the aim of ROTOĐŻ is to improve the cultural vitality of Kirklees, expand audiences, and provide new ways for people to engage with and understand academic research in contemporary art and design.
Why ROTOĐŻ , Why Now?
As Vice Chancellors position their institutionsâ identities and future trajectories in context to national and international league tables, Professor John Goddard1 proposes the notion of the âcivicâ university as a âplace embeddedâ institution; one that is committed to âplace makingâ and which recognises its responsibility to engaging with the public. The civic university has deep institutional connections to different social, cultural and economic spheres within its locality and beyond.
A fundamental question for both the university sector and cultural organisations alike, including local authority, is how the many different articulations of public engagement and cultural leadership which exist can be brought together to form one coherent, common language. It is critical that we reach out and engage the community so we can participate in local issues, impact upon society, help to forge well-being and maintain a robust cultural economy. Within the lexicon of public centered objectives sits the Arts Council Englandâs strategic goals, and those of the Arts and Humanities Research Council â in particular its current Cultural Value initiative. What these developments reveal is that art and design education and professional practice, its projected oeuvre as well as its relationship to cultural life and public funding, is now challenged with having to comprehensively audit its usefulness in financially austere times. It was in the wake of these concerns coming to light, and of the 2010 Government Spending Review that ROTOĐŻ was conceived. These issues and the discussions surrounding them are not completely new. Research into the social benefits of the arts, for both the individual and the community, was championed by the Community Arts Movement in the 1960s. During the 1980s and â90s, John Myerscough and Janet Wolff, amongst others, provided significant debate on the role and value of the arts in the public domain. What these discussions demonstrated was a growing concern that the cultural sector could not, and should not, be understood in terms of economic benefit alone. Thankfully, the value of the relationships between art, education, culture and society is now recognised as being far more complex than the reductive quantification of their market and GDP benefits. Writing in âArt School (Propositions for the 21st Century)â, Ernesto Pujol proposes:ââŠit is absolutely crucial that art schools consider their institutional role in support of democracy. The history of creative expression is linked to the history of freedom. There is a link between the state of artistic expression and the state of democracy.â When we were approached by Huddersfield Art Gallery to work collaboratively on an exhibition programme that could showcase academic staff research, one of our first concerns was to ask the question, how can we really contribute to cultural leadership within the town?â The many soundbite examples of public engagement that we might underline within our annual reports or website news are one thing, but what really makes a difference to a townâs cultural identity, and what affects people in their daily lives? With these questions in mind we sought a distinctive programme within the muncipal gallery space, that would introduce academic research in art, design and architecture beyond the university in innovative ways