HOLLY MARIE ARMISHAW - CONTEMPORARY ARTIST
  • Home
  • Portfolio
  • Anthology
  • Artist Talks
    • Panel Discussion
    • Radio Interview
    • Artist's Talk
  • Artist Statement
  • Curriculm Vitae
  • Contact
  • Essays
  • Blog: Contemporary Art, History and Culture

Defining Class Dysphoria ©, by Holly Marie Armishaw

7/3/2019

0 Comments

 

​Class Dysphoria describes the mental state of unease that one experiences when they are unable to easily categorize themselves into a binary or trinary class identity.  
- Holly Marie Armishaw (January 2019)
​
Picture
"Class Dysphoria™ " (Jan, 2019) 20 x 16" Hand-Gilded Gold Leaf on Watercolor Paper / 20 x 28" Hand-Gilded Gold Leaf on Pastel Paper, © Holly Marie Armishaw

It is my agenda in this article to coin a new term, to create and define a protologism.  If you were to google “Class Dysphoria” (at the point that this article was written) you would not find any exact matches to this term.  What your search would yield, however, are definitions on “dysphoria” and particularly “gender dysphoria”.  So, let us begin there.  Dysphoria is the opposite sensation of euphoria.  Wikipedia defines dysphoria as: “(from Greek: dysphoros - difficult to bear) a profound state of unease or dissatisfaction.  In a psychiatric context, dysphoria may accompany depression, anxiety, or agitation… Common reactions to dysphoria include emotional distress; in some cases, even physical distress.”[1]  

A Google search also produces several results related to gender dysphoria.  Wikipedia defines Gender Dysphoria (GD) as “the distress a person experiences as a result of the sex and gender they were assigned at birth”.[2].  Transracialism may evoke a similarly strong  state of distress.  However, it is not my contention to go into detail on either the topic of gender dysphoria or racial dysphoria, but rather to allude to them in order to draw parallels that aid in defining class dysphoria, since gender, race and class generally constitute the three main pillars of identity.  

[1]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dysphoria
[2]https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_dysphoria
In a world that recognizes that gender and sexuality are fluid, and that race and ethnicity can be any number of combinations, it should also be clearly understood that class identity does not fall into neat and tidy packages either.  Class, or to be clearer, socioeconomic class, is fluid.  A trinary system of categorization - lower, middle and upper classes - are not always viable parameters for many people. 
Picture
"Infinite Shades of Grey - The Fluidity of Socioeconomic Class" (2019) Holly Marie Armishaw

Class Dysphoria speaks to anyone who finds themselves lost in clearly identifying within a singular binary or trinary class identity.  Examples include:
  • those who grew up in a socioeconomic situation that is distinctively different from their present one
  • ​those who live on a source of mediated income, such as a trust fund, and constantly feel themselves to be on a financial leash; their peers may perceive them as wealthy, but they lack any true financial autonomy 
  • ​those whose financial status changed rapidly and dramatically, perhaps due to a windfall in the stock market, receiving a major inheritance, or winning the lottery; the same can be said for those who experience a sudden loss of economic status
  • those who are surrounded by a peer group in which they are either considerably under or over the average socioeconomic status of the group
  • people who aspire to rise into a wealthier socioeconomic class and so spend beyond their means in order to create the illusion of wealth, thereby ironically keeping them from ever attaining that status that they appear to be and so desire
  • those who live well below their means; it has been said that they middle class live above their means while the wealthy live below their means
  • ​those who marry above or below their own class status
  • those who attain an educational or other status that exceeds that of their family
  • those whose profession attaches a socio-economic status upon them whose income may be disparate from the normative expectation; ex. a doctor must be wealthy; an artist must be poor
There is a famous statement quite frequently misattributed to Queen Victoria: “Beware of artists.  They mix with all classes of society and are therefore most dangerous."  In fact, it was in a garbled letter from her Uncle, King Leopold of Belgium, who in 1845 wrote to his dear niece "To hope to escape censure and calamity is next to impossible, but whatever is considered by the enemy as a fit subject for attack is better modified or avoided.  The dealings with artists, for instance, require great prudence; they are acquainted with all classes of society, and for that very reason dangerous; they are hardly ever satisfied, and when you have too much to do with them, you are sure to have ​des ennuis."
Picture

Amidst this epic age of culture clash rigid categorizations of identity, including class, are insufficient and distressing to say the least.  We have not had the right combination of words to express this feeling of unease regarding class definitions, until now.  

- Holly Marie Armishaw  (February 2019)
0 Comments

Herstory of Liberté Égalité Sororité

6/2/2019

0 Comments

 
The year 2018 had been a decent one for my art career.  I had rekindled my business relationship my on again-off again Vancouver-based gallery who hosted my solo show “A Feminist and a Francophile” this past November.  My work had been in four contemporary art fairs in the United States throughout the year:  Art on Paper - NYC, Art Market San Francisco, Seattle Art Fair, and Texas Contemporary Art Fair.  I was also working with private art consultants in San Francisco and in Sacramento where my work was sold at the Crocker Museum’s art auction that summer.  I had a riveting studio visit from a member of the Acquisitions Committee for the San Jose Museum of Art and the main art consultant for the offices of Google, Facebook and other noted corporations.  I was shortlisted for the second year in a row for an artist’s residency in Paris.  My work had finally been received into Vancouver’s prestigious Contemporary Art Gallery’s Annual Gala and Art Auction.  I was invited to be in a group show in New York City at Krause Gallery early in 2019.  And, my work was selling to noted collectors, including an acquisition to a prominent San Francisco based collector who had recently opened his own art foundation following on the footsteps of his maternal family, who founded the distinguished de Young Museum.  All my years of hard work were finally beginning to have some momentum. ​
Picture
"Liberté Égalité Sororité - Crescendo in Violet" 2017-18, and "Liberté Egalité Sororité" (Women's March Protest Posters; both by Holly Marie Armishaw; Installation at Back Gallery Project, 2018
 
On October 6 of 2018, however, it was brought to my attention via an old friend that a mutual Facebook acquaintance of ours had produced a piece of text-based art that exactly echoed the slogan of my most iconic text-based art.  I have been producing several variations of my Liberté Égalité Sororité © works since early 2017, which have since become an iconic part of my practice.  The artist I refer to is a popular (I am told) New York based artist. We have only met via Facebook, where we became friends in 2009 and have a fluid 60 mutual friends.  Having completed thirteen different variations on my Liberté Egalité Sororité © texts over the past two years, their various renditions have made public appearances twelve times included in exhibitions, art fairs, art auctions, public installations and Women’s Marches.  Two of those public appearances were in NYC.   There have also been at least 35 postings of this work of mine on social media, by myself, the galleries I’ve worked with, friends, colleagues, and even Canada’s preeminent newspaper, The Globe and Mail.  [Image Link 1]
“It’s just three words”, you might be saying to yourself.  But, when an artist’s work is truly authentic, it can never just be about three words.
The previous year I had first used the phrase "Liberté Égalité Sororité" as the title of my project proposal for the Summer 2017 Georgia Fee Artist/Writer’s Paris Artist Residency.  In it, I proposed the creation of a series of visual and written works on the virtually unknown women of the French Revolution.  While doing research one woman in particular stood out to me; Marie Olympe de Gouges.  She was an 18th century writer, activist, humanist, abolitionist and feminist.  (My essay on her can be read here.)  The piece of writing that she is most noted for is a feminist revision of France’s Declaration des Droits de l’Homme et le Citoyen (Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the {Male} Citizen).  The rights set out in the original declaration applied to only about 4.3 million French, known as “active citizens” out of a population of around 29 million.  Women were deemed as “passive citizens” along with non-land-owning men, immigrants and servants.  Intersectionality was not a consideration back then; those who needed equality and a voice the most, were callously swept aside.  De Gouges responded with her Declaration des Droites de la Femme et la Citoyenne (Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen). To quote Olympe de Gouges “Homme, es-tu capable d’être juste?!”; translation: 
​“Man, are you not capable of being just?!?
​

​I was absolutely thrilled when I first learned of the witty critique that de Gouges had written an astonishing two centuries before the term “feminist revisionism” had even become a part of our vernacular!  I had found an ally in de Gouges nearly 250 years later.  I had just completed a series of feminist revisionism text-based artworks entitled “How I Became a Feminist by Reading Nietzsche” based on my favorite quotes by Nietzsche, Schopenhauer and Freud, that had made such a deep impression on me in my formative late teenage years.  Like de Gouges with the Declaration of Rights, I was mostly in agreement with the content of these philosophers.  Their misogynistic writings, however, had made me feel excluded as though their wisdom and inspiration were never intended to apply to me, a young woman, just as the rights of the Déclaration were intended only for men.  And so, by inverting the gendered pronouns of their prose, I had made their most influential quotes my own.  Using the same modus operadi that I had used in my series “How I Became a Feminist by Reading Nietzsche” I similarly executed the "Liberté Égalité Sororité" by replacing the masculine signifiers with their feminine counterparts.  I also rendered them both in gold leaf and in nail polish, my signature feminine medium, painting them in various shades of mauve, eggplant and fuchsia.  

Picture
"How I Became a Self-Renouncer by Reading Schopenhauer" (2016-17), 15 x 22" Nail Polish n Watercolor Paper, copyright Holly Marie Armishaw
​
The work in question is a critique of France’s national motto, Liberté Égalité Fraternité, which translates into English as “Liberty Equality Fraternity/Brotherhood”.  The motto is proudly displayed on French currency and every federal and municipal building across France.  This protocol began in 1838, though its origins are rooted in the French Revolution of 1789.  I noticed the inherent contradiction in a national motto, essentially the formula for a democratic nation, that proclaims equality yet fails to recognize over half the population.  To point out this inherent hypocrisy and audacity, the idea of replacing the word “Fraternité” with its feminine counterpart “Sororité (Sisterhood)” came freely and naturally to me at this point in early 2017.  It was simply a matter of combining my passions for French history and culture with feminism thus continuing the pattern of feminist revisionism in my art practice.  Hence Liberté Égalité Sororité soon became a signature work and concept in my art practice - my rallying cry.  
​ 
Picture
"Liberté Égalité Sororité" (2017) 15 x 22" Hand-Gilded Gold Leaf on Watercolour Paper, Custom Framed, Edition of 10. Copyright Holly Marie Armishaw
 
The inspiration for the original choice of the word “fraternité” did not escape my notice.  Having grown up in a family of Freemasons, men and women alike, on both maternal and paternal sides of the family, I understand the concept of fraternity or “brotherhood”, perhaps clearer than most.  Researching and visiting important sites of Freemasons and their predecessors, the Knights Templar, has been a minor obsession of mine for over 20 years. “By the time of the French Revolution, there were some 1250 Masonic Lodges in the country (France).”[1]  Freemasonry had been a prominent means by which the ideas of the Enlightenment had spread across Western Europe.  The Revolution had been an effect from which the Enlightenment had been the cause.  There is no wondering why the French King tried to suppress the publication and dissemination of Diderot’s Encyclopaedia, which was the equivalent of today’s Wikipedia.  The Encyclopaedia empowered the middle class through the spread of knowledge acquired through the scientific revolution and the Age of Reason.  If science and destroyed the authority of the church then the king could not claim to be a “divine ruler appointed by God”. The New World Order, which is demonized by conspiracy theorists, is simply the throwing off of the Ancien Régime (Ancient Regime) that was built on tyranny and autocracy.  
 
Freemasonry is often associated with a nefarious tone, which may be ill-deserved.  Nefarious to whom, I ask?  Secret societies were formed because of the powerful hold that the church and the monarchy held over entire nations of people.  Of course people had to meet in secrecy to discuss ideals of the Enlightenment in the face of censorship and imprisonment.  And, accusing them of heresy or evil was a necessary attempt to quell their power.  Speaking against the church, even when using scientific logic, was speaking against the King whose position depended upon the church, which was therefore treason.  Knowledge was, and still is, a dangerous threat to the balance of power.  We can witness its present perceived threat in extremist communities that deny girls equal access to education even still in the 21st century.  Ignorance is a weapon against the masses, which the brotherhood sought to cast off.  This plight against ignorance continues today still in various forms including politics, the sciences, art and literature.

[1]https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Grand_Orient_de_France

Witnessing the present increasing hatred and discrimination that continues to proliferate and the depreciation for democratic ideals such as liberty and equality (through the increase in both domestic and foreign terrorism that threaten the pursuit of liberty), I turned my attention to the those who fought to develop a society built upon those core democratic principles.  I began to create artwork that was not just about the roots of democracy, but about the French influence that propagated them and the women who have been largely left out of the historical picture.  And so, in early 2017 I applied for the aforementioned Georgia Fee Paris Residency and was shortlisted for their international competition.  Though I ended up as a runner-up, by that point I had become so passionately invested in the idea of my project that I worked out a way to make it happen nonetheless.
​
During that summer I rented an apartment in Paris and spent June and July diligently pursuing traces of the heroines of the French Revolution who had fought so hard to support the revolutionary cause there.  ​Not only were these women left out of the majority of history books and their artifacts lost to time, but most of them had perished in a most tragic way.  While the men who supported the Revolution were honoured and glorified, the women who shared the same commitment of dedicating their lives to the revolutionary cause were restricted from public speech and office, became the source of ridicule and threats, were subjected to public beatings, rape, imprisonment, interrogation, exile, slander and worse.  These women include: Olympe de Gouges, Charlotte Corday, Théroigne de Méricourt, Manon Roland, Germaine de Stæl, Clarie Lacombe and Pauline Leon, none of whose efforts to advocate for the pillars of democracy were welcomed by their “brothers”.  Most of them had ended up guillotined, ironically charged as “enemies of the Revolution”.  Others fled persecution to neighbouring countries or ended up in mental asylums. The majority of the men in power at the Assemblée Nationale shared something in common with the Freemasons (albeit they were 24% one and the same [2]) who both believed that women had much too delicate of a countenance to be involved in such nasty matters as politics.  Their place, the Jacobins said, was to be at home caring for the raising of a young generation of Republicans.  "Women were taught to be committed to their husbands and 'all his interests... [to show] attention and care... [and] sincere and discreet zeal for his salvation.'  A woman's education often consisted of learning to be a good wife and mother; as a result, women were not supposed to be involved in the political sphere, as the limit of their influence was the raising of future citizens."[3]
​
[2] https://www.kamloopsfreemasons.com/wp-content/uploads/Freemasonry-And-The-French-Revolution-1.pdf
[3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_the_French_Revolution

Picture
"Assemblée Nationale" (2011) copyright Holly Marie Armishaw

​During that time I put a tremendous amount of effort into searching Paris for evidence of the women who had fought so hard to support the revolutionary cause there.  ​Not only were these women left out of the majority of history books and their artifacts lost to time, but most of them had perished in a most tragic way.  While the men who supported the Revolution were honoured and glorified, the women who shared the same commitment of dedicating their lives to the cause were restricted from public speech and office, became the source of ridicule and threats, were subjected to public beatings, rape, imprisonment, interrogation, exile, slander and worse.  These women include: Olympe de Gouges, Charlotte Corday, Théroigne de Méricourt, Manon Roland, Germaine de Stæl, Clarie Lacombe and Pauline Leon, none of whose efforts to advocate for the pillars of democracy were welcomed by their “brothers”.  Most of these women that I tracked had ended up guillotined, ironically charged as “enemies of the Revolution”.  Others fled persecution to  neighbouring countries or ended up in mental asylums.  Apparently the majority of the men in power at the Assemblée Nationale shared something in common with the Freemasons (albeit they were often one and the same) who both believed that women had much too delicate of a countenance to be involved in such nasty matters as politics.  Their place, the Jacobins said, was to be at home caring for the raising of a young generation of Republicans.  "Women were taught to be committed to their husbands and 'all his interests... [to show] attention and care... [and] sincere and discreet zeal for his salvation.'  A woman's education often consisted of learning to be a good wife and mother; as a result women were not supposed to be involved in the political sphere, as the limit of their influence was the raising of future citizens." [4]
​
[4] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_the_French_Revolution
My commitment to the cause of Liberté Égalité Sororité and the heroines of the French Revolution involved several photographic excursions to search for and to photograph their presence in history.  My quest took me to ancient prisons, a mental asylum, the site where the guillotine was invented, the place where thousands of executions occurred,  the street where an assassination by a young woman on one of the blood-thirsty radical revolutionaries happened, the former site of the Templar fortress, a national Masonic lodge, clandestine rooms atop restaurants where covert operations were discussed, museums, official historic institutions, and even to a cobweb infested staircase beneath my apartment that led to the underground tunnels/catacombs.  These and other journeys, alongside research through countless documentaries, books and articles, all carried out en Français, reveal the legwork, passion and dedication behind my creation of the Liberté Egalité Sororité artworks. 
 
As the Women's Movement sweeps across the globe I regard it as unfinished business not just for ourselves, but for the rights of those whose lives were swept under the carpet in the past, and as a battleground for the women of generations to come.  The past, present and future are inextricably linked, hence, my interest and practicing feminist revisionism in my art since 2011. ​ 
Picture
"Self-Portrait as Théroigne de Mericourt" (2018), copyright Holly Marie Armishaw

​A friend and colleague of mine declared "He’s capitalized on the #MeToo movement by stealing from someone whom the movement is meant to protect!", upon hearing about the appropriation of my "Liberté Égalité Sororité" work regarding the aforementioned NYC artist.   Maynard Monroe has appropriated my artwork, a rallying cry for female equality, for his own personal gain and twisted the context to cover his tracks.  This artist’s portfolio suggests that this isn't the first time he's "borrowed" phrases from other artists for his text-based work.  That, and his social media also suggests that he doesn't have any interest in France or French culture, nor speaks French.  But the most telling fact is that what an artist’s work will always betray - patterns.  Feminist revisionism and the inverting of gendered pronouns are devices that this artist has never used in his work before this piece; it simply doesn't fit his pattern.  ​​Despite the hypocrisy of claiming to be a feminist, please, tell me again how this is "an original M.M. work" and not simply a nonchalant appropriation of a Facebook friends’ work because she has less visibility and is therefore fodder for someone of higher repute and lesser integrity.  

The art world asks why there aren’t more successful women artists.  Perhaps more women, of the past, present and future, would achieve their lofty ambitions if men weren't perpetually taking from us and thwarting our career attempts.  Whether it be stealing our sense of autonomy, crippling us with trauma, or appropriation of intellectual property, enough is enough!  Perhaps my sentiment is best expressed by the Notorious RGB (Ruth Bader Ginsberg):

​“All we ask of our breathren is that they take their feet off our necks.”

​- Holly Marie Armishaw (2019)

Timeline of Liberté Égalité Sororité public appearances. 

​Suggested Readings:
​
Moore, Lucy. Liberty – The Lives and Times of Six Women in Revolutionary France. Harper Collins Publishers, 2006.

Birch, Una.  Secret Societies - Illuminati, Freemasons and the French Revolution.  Ibis Press, 2007.

Poirson, Martial.  Amazones de la Revolution (Des Femmes dans la tourmente de 1789).  Gourcuff Gradenigo, 2016.
 
Blanc, Olivier.  Olympe de Gouges – Des Droits de la Femme à la Guillotine.  Éditions Tallandier, 2014.


https://www.kamloopsfreemasons.com/wp-content/uploads/Freemasonry-And-The-French-Revolution-1.pdf
0 Comments

Olympe de Gouges: Feminist, Humanist and Enlightenment Thinker of 18th Century France

1/2/2019

0 Comments

 
Olympe de Gouges was arguably the most important woman of the French Revolution.  Although not as well known as others, particularly in English speaking circles, de Gouges produced a body of written work that expressed important ideals on human rights that were quite radical during that time, but are taken for granted in most democratic countries today.  Her clarity of recognizing injustice was unparalleled in late 18th century France.  She acted with a fearless moral compass on behalf of oppressed persons without distinction of class, race or gender, whether they were colonized slaves or the king of France.  Armed with a quill pen as her only weapon, de Gouges headed into the bloody Reign of Terror and nothing short of the guillotine would deter her bravery in fighting for human rights.
Picture
"Self-Portrait as Olympe de Gouges (Work in Progress)" 2018, Holly Marie Armishaw

​The outbreak of Revolution was a source of great optimism for the women of Paris in hopes that the changes to be gained would be to the benefit of all persons, including themselves.  Olympe De Gouges hopes for the Revolution differed from those of the women who marched on Versailles in that their demands were aimed at immediate needs like the securing of bread and wheat, while de Gouges had loftier sights such as gaining long-term political equality for women.  This gained her a reputation as one of the most notable and earliest feminists of France.
One of the most pivotal events in the French Revolution was indeed the Women’s March on Versailles on October 5th and 6th of 1789, which pressured King Louis XVI into finally signing the Declaration of Rights and in bringing him and the royal family to the Tuileries Palace in Paris where they would be at the mercy of the Revolutionaries.  However, the rights that those women had marched and fought for would not be their own.  The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen (Déclaration des Droits de l’Homme et du Citoyen) did not include women, nor even consider their needs.  Women were categorized as passive citizens, meaning that they were unable to vote and excluded from the rights laid out in the Declaration.  Likewise, men who were servants also considered passive citizens.  Only land-owning men were afforded the rights of “universal” suffrage.  Ironically, this monumental document was inspired by and Jean Jacques Rousseau and cited his Enlightenment principle that “all men are born and remain free and equal in rights”.  Article VI of the Declaration states that “The law is the expression of the general will” and yet excludes over half of the general population.  In fact, the estimated population of France at that time was approximately 29 million people, but only 4.3 million Frenchmen were extended the rights of active citizens.  This document, rife with contradictions, was written by bourgeoisie men for bourgeoisie men.  Laughably, Article XII states “The guarantee of the rights of man and of the citizen necessitates a public force: this force is thus instituted for the advantage of all and not for the particular utility of those in whom it is trusted.”  And so, with her sharp intellect, Olympe de Gouges attacked the Declaration using the wit and language of an Enlightenment philosopher, releasing it’s antithesis in 1791, the Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citizen (Déclaration des Droits de la Femme et de la Citoyenne).
Picture
Déclaration des Droits de l'Homme et du Citoyen, 1789

As the National Assembly worked to establish new laws to replace those of the old regime (l’Ancien Regime
), Olympe de Gouges fought to address them with demands, which might extend natural law to all French people, including women.  In the name of liberty and equality she wrote 40 plays, two novels and over 90 political pamphlets.  Her recommendations, contained within these writings, included:
  • The right for women to divorce their husbands
  • The rights of women to reveal the natural father of their children
  • The right for illegitimate children to inherit property equal to legitimate ones
  • The emancipation of girls and women from being forced into convents by against their will by their relatives
  • Suppression of the dowry system
  • Social services for orphans, widows and the elderly
  • The right for women to have equal access to education
  • The right for women to gain employment without permission from their husbands
  • The regulation of prostitution
  • The right for women to have free speech
  • The right for women to vote
  • The right to address and question one’s governing authority
  • The right to a fair trial by jury for all men and women
  • Defense against capital punishment
  • The right for priests and nuns to marry
  • Abolition of slavery in the French colonies
From her biography it can be deduced that Olympe de Gouges unwavering commitment to combat for those who were oppressed was influenced by her own life as a marginalized individual.  Born in 1748 as Marie Gouze to a petite bourgeoisie family in Montauban of South Western France, she was the illegitimate child of a man of power and wealth, Jean-Jacques Lefranc, Marquis de Pompignan.  Her biological father, however, refused to publically acknowledge her as his daughter.  The ill treatment of both herself and her mother compelled Marie to later plead for rights such as child-support on behalf of illegitimate children and their widowed mothers.  Married off at the age of 16 to a local innkeeper of Montauban, it was a most unhappy marriage for Marie, no doubt, inspiring her to later fight for women’s right to divorce.  The parallels are endless.  Olympe de Gouges relentless pursuit of equality being significantly based on personal experience foretells the second wave feminism of the 1970’s whose rallying cry was “The personal is political”.  “The movement encouraged women to understand aspects of their personal lives as deeply politicized and reflective of a sexist power structure.”[1]
Picture
Biography on Olympe de Gouges by Olivier Blanc, 2014
Picture
Olympe de Gouges biography by Olivier Blanc - Translation in Progress by Holly Marie Armishaw, 2017, Paris

​Widowed by age 18, in 1770, she and her son Pierre moved to Paris where she reinvented herself as Olympe de Gouges, an amalgamation of her mother’s and father’s names.  Although she had long-term partners in Paris, de Gouges refused to re-marry as doing so would limit her political freedom and allow a husband ownership over her intellectual property.  Inspired by her biological father who was regarded also as a man of letters, de Gouges followed in his footsteps, leading her to the salons of Paris and literary circles.  As a young women of the French provinces, de Gouges had received only a nominal education by local nuns.  The French dialect of Montauban was also very different from that of Parisians, and so her grasp of the language, both spoken and written, was indeed a challenge.  Likely it was this challenge that inspired de Gouges to fight for the equal education of girls.  Furthermore, it was argued that women could not be allowed to vote because they weren’t educated and therefore could not make educated decisions. So by keeping girls from being educated, they were also thereby kept from voting, a practice that is still prolific in some parts of the world today. De Gouges fight for women to hold political equality foretold the fight for suffrage in the 19th century, which heralded the first wave of feminism.  However, it would not be until 1944 that women in France gained the right to vote.
​
"Women have the right to mount the scaffold, they must also have the right to mount the speaker's rostrum." Olympe de Gouges

​Acknowledged mostly as a feminist, Olympe de Gouges was, above all, a humanist.  In 1784 she wrote the play Zamore and Mirza or The Enslavement of the Blacks (Zamore et Mirza ou l’Eclavage des Noirs).  Sadly, the play was shut down after only three performances due to the brawls that ensued between abolitionists and businessmen who had an interest in the slave trade.  Ten years later, de Gouges fight was reconciled when slavery in the French colonies was abolished in 1794.  Unfortunately though, in 1804 Napoleon reinstated slavery in the sugarcane growing colonies under regulation of the Napoleonic Code.  But by the 1850’s France, Britain the United States had abolished and criminalized slavery.  However, the slave trade is still alive today as seen in CNN’s 2017 exposé of Libya, proving that this dark stain on humanity is one not easily eliminated.
Picture
Photo by Holly Marie Armishaw, 2017 (Musée Grevin, Paris)

​Extending her ideology of the right to a fair trial to be extended to all persons, was to be her downfall.  Stripped of his title as king, Louis XVI had become simply Louis Capet, and was facing trial for treason against France.  De Gouges, who was also against capital punishment, offered to act as his legal counsel.  She stated that “As king, I believe Louis to be in the wrong, but take away this proscribed title and he ceases to be guilty, in the eyes of the republic”.[2]  Her alignment with the moderate Girondins was barely tolerable, but what was perceived as her support for the monarchists, had crossed the line tantamount to being an “enemy of the Revolution”.
In one of her most memorable statements, Olympe de Gouges declared “women have the right to mount the scaffold, they must also have the right to mount the speaker's rostrum".  Sadly, while she would never be permitted to enjoy the latter, her prolific career as a playwright and human rights activist would come to an end at the drop of the blade on November 3, 1793.
Picture
"Execution of Olympe de Gouges" Photo-composite by Holly Marie Armishaw, 2017


- Holly Marie Armishaw, 2017 (Re-posted 2019)
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_feminism
[2] http://www.olympedegouges.eu/defenseur_officieux.php


​Bibliography:

 
Blanc, Olivier.  Olympe de Gouges – Des Droits de la Femme à la Guillotine.  Éditions Tallandier, 2014.
 
Poirson, Martial.  Amazones de la Revolution (Des Femmes dans la tourmente de 1789).  Gourcuff Gradenigo, 2016.
 
Moore, Lucy. Liberty – The Lives and Times of Six Women in Revolutionary France. Harper Collins Publishers, 2006.
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Declaration_of_the_Rights_of_Man_and_of_the_Citizen
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Olympe_de_Gouges
 
https://www.loc.gov/law/help/inheritance-laws/france.php
 
https://bonjourparis.com/history/olympe-de-gouges/
 
http://olympedegougesinfo.weebly.com/background.html
 
http://chnm.gmu.edu/revolution/d/293/
 
http://www.iep.utm.edu/gouges/
0 Comments

The Women's March on Washington (2017) vs. The Women's March on Versailles (1789)

1/2/2019

0 Comments

 
February 21st, 2017 marked one of the largest protests in world history.  The Women’s March on Washington drew an estimated 500,000 people to the flagship march in Washington, with officials reporting that marches took place on all seven continents, in 673 places worldwide totalling an estimated 5 million participants worldwide!  Word had spread like wildfire through social media as marches were organized in over 80 countries.  The main impetus for such an event was the inauguration of the Trump administration into the U.S. White House, one of the most powerful positions of authority in the world, following a corrupt presidential campaign fueled with misogyny.  While the main message of the march was that Women’s Rights are Human Rights, the agenda included Ending Violence, Reproductive Rights, LGBTQIA Rights, Workers Rights, Civil Rights (Black Lives Matter), Disability Rights, Immigrant Rights, and Environmental Justice.

The unification of women seeking to dismantle system of oppression is not a new concept.  In fact, as a Francophile and independent scholar of the French Revolution, the Women’s March on Washington was an immediate reminder to me of the Women’s on Versailles.
Picture
"Women's March on Washington vs. Women's March on Versailles" (2017) composite by Holly Marie Armishaw

In Paris on the morning of October 5, 1789, a young girl beat upon a drum summoning a call to action.  A crowd grew up to 10,000 people, consisting mainly of working-class women from the faubourgs of Paris who assembled at the Hôtel de Ville (city hall) commencing the historical event now known as the Women’s March on Versailles.  Hailstorms and poor harvests had caused a grain shortage and subsequently, the price of bread to rise.  A lavish banquet had been held on October 1st to welcome the Royal Guards, who were also seen as an affront to the peoples own National Guard, as meanwhile peasants died of starvation.  This mockery of the peasant's suffering enraged the women of Paris who could not feed their own families.  After pillaging the Hôtel de Ville looking for bread and weapons, they set out on the 20 km march to Chateau Versailles knowing that the King, his family and the royal court, were never without bread.  As they marched, their numbers grew, joined by women and men alike.

While the Women’s March on Washington of 2017 was noted as being a peaceful protest, the same cannot be said for the Women’s March on Versailles of 1789.  Peaceful negotiations by the men who spoke in the Estates General had been proving ineffective, inspiring the women to take matters into their own hands through any means necessary.  Often referred to as a mob or horde, these were peasant women who did not have the privilege of an education.  Their core group who led the March on Versailles were the tough, burly women known as poissards who worked in the fish markets of Faubourg St. Antoine and Les Halles.  They armed themselves with pikes, pitchforks and large knives.  Protestors were urged to take any weapons that they could lay their hands upon, including muskets and a cannon recently gained during the Storming of the Bastille that summer.
Picture
"Women's March on Versailles - Arrival at the Palace Gates" 2017, Holly Marie Armishaw

When the marchers arrived at Chateau Versailles they found the gates, which were usually open, closed and guarded.  Word had reached the palace before their arrival.  They demanded to speak to the King who agreed to hear their grievances and the guard allowed a handful of women to enter.  Following a long evening of negotiations, King Louis XVI and his family slept under close guard.  As dawn broke, the women breached their way through a side entrance of the palace gates and led the angry mob into the palace in search of the Queen, whom they intended to slaughter.  Violence broke out as the Royal Guard attempted to defend their charges.  Two unfortunate guards were beheaded and their heads were proudly paraded on pikes.  The angry mob arrived in the Queen’s bedchambers just after she had escaped through a hidden doorway, while history alleges that they stabbed away at her bed perhaps hoping she was still in it.  The royal family hunkered in fear for their lives in the King’s chambers at the mercy of their subjects.  General Lafayette mediated negotiations, which would spare their lives for the time being if certain demands were met.

The actions of the Women’s March on Versailles reaped three great rewards.  Firstly, they received a signed order by the King for any delayed wheat shipments to be dispatched to Paris immediately.  Secondly, the King finally agreed to sign the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen, which he had until then delayed doing.  This was a momentous occasion – not unlike the signing of the Canadian Bill of Rights or the American Constitution. Lastly, the King and his family, under extreme duress, reluctantly agreed to move to Paris immediately where they would be at the mercy and of the people.  They established themselves in the vacant Tuileries Palace and were essentially under house arrest. The National Assembly also moved from Versailles and was established nearby so that progress could occur more effectively.  Unfortunately, the rights that the women who had marched 20 km in the rain and spent the night on the cold, damp street, fighting to bring the King to accountability, were rights that would not be their own.  The Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen did not include any rights for women, who were merely “passive citizens” unable to vote and discouraged from political involvement in favour of tending to their “natural” place at home raising their families of a new generation of Republicans.
The day after the Women’s March on Washington, the newly inaugurated U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted “Watched protests yesterday but was under the impression that we just had an election!  Why didn't these people vote?”.  Could it be that unlike European women who had faced famine, war and unimaginable oppression, we are just a little too comfortable in our North American existence, taking luxuries like social welfare, the right to vote, and the right to education for granted?  Unlike the French women of 1789, the American women of 2017 hold the right to vote.  They also have the right to education, unlike their French predecessors.  Education has long been a criteria point in the decision on whether or not to grant voting rights to certain groups of people as it is often argued that those who are not educated are not well-informed enough to vote.  And so, while the historical impact of the 10,000 people who marched to Versailles held a lasting and active effect on French history, it is not yet clear what, if any effect the marching of 5,000,000 people who participated in the Women’s March of 2017, will have on 21st century North American history. 

- Holly Marie Armishaw; November 2017 (Re-posted)
0 Comments

Site For A Life Still: Andrew Dadson at the Contemporary Art Gallery, by Holly Marie Armishaw

17/11/2017

0 Comments

 
On a typical dark, rainy Vancouver Sunday afternoon in 2011 I had the pleasure of my first genuine encounter with the work of Andrew Dadson.  As I gathered with other members of the Contemporary Art Society of Vancouver for a studio visit in Dadson’s garage, which doubled as his studio at the time, I listened carefully as he shared the process and meaning behind his art practice.  As he spoke of the representation of the void in his work, I experienced that moment of exhilaration when I am able to make an intellectual connection with someone else’s work.  My mind immediately conjured images from Stephen Hawking’s writings on dark matter and wormholes.  I have been quietly following Dadson’s work ever since that day as it has made its way to various international exhibitions and art fairs.  Six years later, upon viewing his solo exhibition, I am as impressed with Dadson’s practice today as I was in 2011.

As you enter the Contemporary Art Gallery during Andrew Dadson’s solo show “Site For Still Life”, curated by Director Nigel Prince, the first thing that you’ll notice is the soft, violet aura which emanates from the B.C. Binning wing.  One is drawn like a moth to a flame towards a series of eight potted houseplants, dispersed atop a low platform at the far end of the gallery.  Though varying in type and size, each plant and its pot are painted uniformly in white, biodegradable paint.  The plants are properly potted in moist, fertilized soil and are illuminated by LED grow lights placed at either side of the platform.  This is a living sculpture – a growing trend among 20th century contemporary art, which uses plants and animals as its unwitting subjects.  As these plants grow, their artificial shells crack from the internal pressure leaving parts of the leaves exposed and paint debris scattered below.  “Houseplants” (2017) is an extension of Dadson’s practice, which traverses the delineation between painting and sculpture. 
Picture
“Houseplants” (2017) by Andrew Dadson, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Dadson is perhaps best known for his thick, sculptural paintings created by an additive process of multiple layers of various colours of paint.  A process-based artist, his technique is revealed in the application and careful placement of the paint itself.  After the paint is applied most of it is then scraped away from the surface of the canvas and onto the edges, thus extending the painting beyond the canvas itself, creating a thick, multi-colored crust.  Once the layering is complete, in an act of negation, Dadson applies the thick painting into a second raw canvas before removing the original one.  What was once the bottom layer of the painting then becomes the top.  An indentation is left where the thick primary canvas once was, creating a concave low-relief sculpture.  The result is one of his signature “Restretch” paintings.  The final, top layer of paint showing is always either white or black, bringing the viewer back into the void of abstraction recalling Malevich’s seminal work “The Black Square” (1915).
Picture
“Black Restretch with Gravel (Whistler)” (2017) by Andrew Dadson, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Picture
“Black Square” (1915) Kasmir Malevich, Oil on Canvas, Image in Public Domain
The four small “Restretch” paintings in “Site For A Still Life” were created using Dadson’s signature process, except that he replaced multi-colored paint layers with raw materials such as locally sourced mulch, gravel and soil in an homage to Arte Povera.  Dadson’s use of paint and soils can easily be related to his landscape interventions, such as “Black Painted Lawn” (2006) and “Black Hill” (2014), in which he spray painted sections of outdoor private and public property with non-toxic acrylic paint, then photo-documented the work for posterity.  The visual essence of these installations parallels his monochromatic works on canvas.  While this act of obliteration of still recalls Malevich’s “Black Square”, Dadson almost intuitively realizes in his work that the void, or nothingness, can only be defined in comparison to something, hence leaving the rough edges to define or frame the negative.
Picture
“Black Restretch with Red Mulch (East Vancouver)” 2017, by Andew Dadson; photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
In the Alvin Balkind wing at the CAG, Dadson has darkened the gallery and painted the walls black.  In the centre, two projectors face opposite walls running the same reel of film.  While one projects a sunrise the other, a sunset; at times it is difficult to tell which is which.  Both time-lapsed films contain a partly cloudy sky, and a large glowing orb, all rendered in monochromatic tinted orange. “Sunrise/Sunset” (2015/17) is a simple, but powerful metaphor for the cyclical opposing forces of nature and the temporality of existence.
Picture
“Sunset/Sunrise” (2017) by Andrew Dadson photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Returning to the B.C. Binning wing, two large monochromatic paintings suddenly come into focus.  “Silver Mass” (2017) and “Double Half (2017) seem almost representational, as far as abstract paintings go.  On the thick silver coated mass of paint a circular form appears in diminished view above a partial view of a much larger, assumingly closer, circular form.  One can easily imagine that this is a view of one planet or moon, as seen from another.  This premise is reinforced by marks that could easily be seen as moon craters.  “Double Half”, whose final layer is rendered in white, seems again to represent celestial bodies, this time as seen from outer space.  In a subtractive method, Dadson has gouged away small areas of the top paint layer to reveal a deep blue beneath, suggesting far away galaxies and stars.  The end result is as if the artist has rendered a view from space, in a reversal of dark and light.
Picture
Noting how the artist focused this exhibit on atmosphere, (sun) light, earth (soil) and plants, all basic elements of survival – a clearer and profounder sense of Dadson’s work is revealed. Upon carefully viewing each work in the exhibit, the “Houseplants” installation takes on new meaning.  The scene of quiet, motionless life forms bathed in an otherworldly light have a sublime effect.  My thoughts return to Stephen Hawking and his proclamation in the spring of 2017 that humans must look to inhabit other planets within the next 100 years in order to survive before life on earth as we know it is decimated.  Dadson seems more optimistic in his outlook for the humankind future than Malevich did.  Where it is possible to sustain plant life, there is hope.  Until that time, earth is still a site for life.

- Holly Marie Armishaw (October 2017)
0 Comments

Defining Post-Parisian Depression, by Holly Marie Armishaw

18/10/2017

1 Comment

 
Post-Parisian Depression is, as described by its name, a period of notable depression that one experiences after leaving Paris and returning home.  It is a neologism that I created to describe the frequent aching pain that I experience upon separation from Parisian life.  Symptoms are similar to those of other forms of depression and are marked by a sense of grief and loss.  Caused by a return to reality, Post-Parisian Depression is the reconciling of what “is” with what “could be”.  One might imagine how wonderful their life could be if situated permanently in a vibrant major (art) world capital.  The heightened stimulation of the brain that one enjoyed while in Paris, now deactivated, still clings desperately to the memories, the moments, and the feelings of rapture that one felt while in the midst of their Parisian experience. 
 
The effect of leaving Paris is similar to the low experienced after a drug high; as the dopamine levels in the brain return to their normal state, they no longer feel sufficient.  Symptoms often include lethargy or malaise and may be further exacerbated by simultaneously occurring symptoms of jet lag.  Post-Parisian Depression exists primarily as a tongue-in-cheek condition not yet recognized by the medical community, or as one might call it "a first world problem".  Its recurrences and longevity  can be exacerbated by triggering memories of Paris simply through browsing photos. 
Picture
"Paris, Isle de la Cite from the Right Bank" (2017) copyright Holly Marie Armishaw

​​To love Paris is to love history.  Secondary nostalgia, to coin another neologism, is brought on by a sense of proximity with great figures of the past, whether they be artists, poets, writers, philosophers, revolutionaries, designers, fashionable aristocrats, emperors, kings or medieval knights.  To walk in the footsteps of history, from the Middle Ages to the Enlightenment, the French Revolution, the Belle Époque, the Avant-Garde, and Post-War Paris, is one of the most powerful features of this magnificent city.  The idea of being part of something much grander than oneself is captivating to say the least.  This concept of secondary nostalgia was so whimsically depicted in Woody Allen’s 2011 film “Midnight in Paris”.  With its world-class museums containing collections from Ancient Egypt to the present, the ability to transport oneself to their preference of time and place in history is a privilege unknown to the majority of North Americans, who otherwise may become immersed in other cultures of the past only through books, films and the web.

One of Paris’s greatest strengths is that its attention is not lost on narcissism.  La Grande Dame holds up a mirror to rest of the world to contemplate.  Its many restaurants, museums, and contemporary art galleries, are a critical reflection of the diversity of its homeland, its colonies, and the world beyond.  Each arrondisement bears a signature flavor of ethnicities and religions that can vary vastly from one neighborhood to the next.  You may see stylish business men and women, Orthodox Jews, men and women dressed in traditional colorful African garb, Muslim women wearing hijabs while sporting the latest Chanel handbags, Asians of every persuasion, and young hipsters, all of whom call Paris home.  Our senses run on overdrive as we process the thrill of experiencing cultures and multiple languages that may be somewhat foreign to us, when in fact, it is we who are the foreigners.

France is similar enough to North America to be comfortable, but different enough to be exciting.  By contrast it is that sameness that for some, makes our North American home cities so dull.  Canada, for example, celebrated its 150th anniversary just this summer.  (That is not to say that Canada was not inhabited by its First Nations People long before it was officially declared a country.)  By comparison, Paris has maintained itself as a city for approximately 3000 years!  We are, no matter how many generations old, all visitors here if not of First Nations ancestry.  And so there is a sense that, even for a fourth or fifth generation Canadian like myself, that can only be known through spending time in Europe; that sense of discovering your ancestral roots and taking one step closer to knowing your true self.  If you don’t know where you come from then how can you know who you are?  This sense of proximity with our ancestry divulges some of the power that Paris holds over us. 
 
We tend to feel much more alive when we travel.  Outside of our comfort zones our brains are much more engaged.  The smallest tasks become challenges: digging through a pile of change in our pockets and studying each coin carefully to determine it’s value as we attempt to pay for our morning coffee, successfully navigating the Paris metro, ordering dinner without resorting to speaking English, and a multitude of other common daily activities are all small victories.  In our home cities our brains become lazy.  We can complete these everyday tasks on autopilot without the slightest concern.  It is those small mental stimulations, like hearing new languages and accents, navigating new city roads or metro systems, and learning a new set of cultural norms, that may challenge us now and keep us from developing Alzheimer’s or dementia as we grow older.
 
And so as we return the comfort of our homes, bathed in familiarity as our brains return to their normal autonomic states, it is not surprising to feel a sense of loss as a part of us that was once fully engaged returns to it’s slumber until the next trip to Paris.    

- Holly Marie Armishaw, 2017
Picture
"Post-Parisian Depression" (2019) copyright Holly Marie Armishaw, Hand-Gilded Gold-Leaf on Artboard
1 Comment

"Tracey Emin: I've Got It All" by Holly Marie Armishaw

30/10/2016

0 Comments

 
Tracey Emin is one of the most famous and controversial artists to come out of the United Kingdom in decades.  She was born in Croydon, a suburb of South London, on July 3 of 1963 to unwed parents, her mother of English origin and her father of Turkish Cypriot descent.  They raised her in the seaside city of Margate, where she had a difficult time during her teenage years, later expressed in vivid detail through her artwork.  By the 1990’s Emin had made it onto the world stage of contemporary art as one of the most celebrated YBA’s (Young British Artists).  Although she has turned her personal tragedies into a form of cultural currency, her success has not come without sacrifice.

Lauded as a significant figure in contemporary feminist art for her confessional tone, Emin wholeheartedly embraces the feminist adage “the personal is political”.  In interviews she speaks candidly about being raped at age thirteen, getting pregnant at age eighteen, having two abortions and three miscarriages.  By exposing the intimate details of her own life and the emotional scars of abuse and trauma that women are frequently conditioned to conceal, Emin creates an empowering dialogue about feminine existence.
PictureI’ve Got It All (2000), Tracey Emin, C-Print, 43 x 49” (109 x 124 cm), Courtesy of White Cube

I’ve Got It All (2000) is an enlarged Polaroid snapshot of Emin that contains many significant themes that run throughout her art practice – sexuality, intimacy, honesty, exposure, rawness, and the repressed anger that typically accompanies emotional pain.  Sitting on a rust red floor in a low-cut Vivienne Westwood dress, legs splayed, Emin attempts to gather a pile of British currency that seems to spew uncontrollably from her loins.  The context of when this image was created is essential to its central interpretation.  In 1999 Emin was selected as a nominee for the Turner Prize.  Although she didn’t win, her controversial piece My Bed (1998) inspired such a media frenzy that she overshadowed the actual winner. I’ve Got It All is clearly a celebration of triumph in the face of challenging odds.
An alternative interpretation to the celebrative tone of I’ve Got It All (2000) considers the title as sarcastic.  Emin has been open about discussing the fact that she never had children.  “I would have been so much happier had I not had the abortions, but I truly believe that I would have been so much unhappier if I had had the children."[1]  She has been heavily criticized for suggesting that motherhood and successful careers cannot exist simultaneously.  However, she has opened up a very relevant discourse on an issue on the choice of childbirth that most serious career woman, and certainly every female artist, has contemplated by the time they have reached age 40.  Emin was 37 when this photo was taken.  The wealth portrayed in I’ve Got It All is a lifeless substitute for the children that she never had.  But, while Emin has never carried any of her pregnancies to full term, she has given birth to art works and ideas that will far outlive her self; they are her carefully chosen legacy. 

[1]www.independent.co.uk/voices/columnists/tracey-emin/tracey-emin-i-felt-that-in-return-for-my-childrens-souls-i-had-been-given-my-success-1518934.html
Bibliography:

“Tracey Emin: I’ve Got It All.  Saatchi Gallery. www.saatchigallery.com/artists/artpages/tracey_emin_i_got_all.htm.  Accessed Oct 25, 2016.
 
Digiulio, Lauren.  “How Tracey Emin Conquered the World.” Idiom, September 28th, 2011, idiommag.com/2011/09/how-tracey-emin-conquered-the-world.  Accessed Oct. 26, 2016.
 
Ward, Ossian.  “Tracey Emin: No Bedtime Story.” Art in America, June 2011 Issue, pages unknown, www.artinamericamagazine.com/news-features/magazine/tracey-emin.  Accessed Oct. 27, 2016.
 
“Biography.” Tracey Emin Studio, www.traceyeminstudio.com/biography.  Accessed on Oct. 26, 2016.
 
Biography.com Editors.  “Tracey Emin Biography.”  A&E Television Networks,  
www.biography.com/people/tracey-emin-20891535.  Accessed Oct 26, 2016.
 
“Tracey Emin in Confidence.”  YouTube, uploaded by braitnicho, Aug. 3, 2013,
www.youtube.com/watch?v=vSNXVjU_Tdo. 
 
“Tracey Emin - The South Bank Show.”  YouTube, uploaded by VHS Pile, Feb 21, 2013.  www.youtube.com/watch?v=OxaoAy9oNtY#t=262.466757.
 
“BBC HARDTalk with Tracey Emin” (Stephen Sackur Interviews Tracey Emin) YouTube, uploaded by BBC Hardtalk, Jun 12, 2012, www.youtube.com/watch?v=og5FqDxPUKg
 
Clearwater, Bonnie.  “Roving Eye: A Happy Tracey Emin.”  Art in America, Dec 19, 2011.  www.artinamericamagazine.com/news-features/news/roving-eye-tracey-emin.  Accessed Oct. 27, 2016. 

Jones, Liz.  “A life more Eminent: Tracey Emin opens up her intimate photo memoir - and tells Liz Jones why her 'not always palatable' past has shaped her life's work.”  Daily Mail Online,  April 20, 2013. www.dailymail.co.uk/home/you/article-2311050/Tracey-Emin-opens-intimate-photo-memoir-tells-Liz-Jones-past-shaped-lifes-work.html, Accessed Oct. 26, 2016
 
Manchester, Elizabeth.  “Tracey Emin: Terribly Wrong.”  Tate, July 2000. www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/emin-terribly-wrong-p11565/text-summary.  Accessed Oct. 26, 2016.
 
Tracey Emin: 'I felt that, in return for my children's souls, I had been given my success’.” Independent, Jan. 28, 2009, www.independent.co.uk/voices/columnists/tracey-emin/tracey-emin-i-felt-that-in-return-for-my-childrens-souls-i-had-been-given-my-success-1518934.html.  Accessed Oct. 27, 2016.
 
Urist, Jacoba.  “Why can’t great artists be mothers?”  NY Times, May 21, 2015. nytlive.nytimes.com/womenintheworld/2015/05/21/why-cant-great-artists-be-mothers.  Accessed Oct 26, 2016.
0 Comments

What is Painting? Perspectives from Art Basel 2016, by Holly Marie Armishaw

20/7/2016

0 Comments

 
As I entered the vast halls of booths at Art Basel 2016 I was searching for new and exciting developments in photography.  I found little to none.  What did cry out to me most from the walls though was that something much more exciting was happening in the world of painting.  One of the first works that really captured my attention was by Pamela Rosenkrantz - a fridge stocked with water bottles, each bottle filled with paint pigments.  "Now that's a painting!" I said to myself.  Here is my selection of works from Art Basel 2016 that challenge the notion of painting as we know it.
Traditionally speaking painting was simply: PAINT + CANVAS = PAINTING

Are both elements really required for a work to be considered a painting?  After all, Robert Raushenberg's first "combine painting" entitled "Bed" of 1955 used the artists own bedding materials instead of a canvas to paint on.  If it is agreed that we may eliminate the canvas and replace it with bedding, wood panel or acrylic sheeting, then it seems fair game to perhaps replace the paint with alternatives or even eliminate it altogether.   Such is the case in Tauba Auerbach's woven canvases or Nicholas Hlobo's canvases with ribbon.  In other works, the paint itself is kept, but deconstructed, omitting the oil that is traditionally mixed with pigment to produce paint.  A fantastic example of this is Thilo Heinzmann's delicate minimal canvas.  Anish Kapoor, the master of materiality and contemporary alchemist, presents "Dragon", which, while not on canvas, features monochromes of an intensely rich Prusssian blue pigment (reminiscent of Yves Kleins "YK Blue") applied to eight Japanese riverbed stones.  Painting is no longer about subject matter; rather, it is an exploration in formalist practices.  Materiality defines painting of this era. 

While you might not agree with me that all of these are paintings, perhaps neither will all of the artists I've featured.  But, in taking a cue from the title of Rosenkrantz's refrigerated pigments I urge you to "Look Deeper".

- Holly Marie Armishaw, July 2016
0 Comments

What is Bastille Day and Why is it Relevant to the Western World?  by Holly Marie Armishaw

15/7/2016

0 Comments

 
Picture
"Prise de la Bastille" (Anonymous)
Bastille Day is a national holiday celebrated annually on July 14th by millions of French citizens.  It was on July 14th, 1789 that the citizens of Paris stormed the Bastille, marking a key turning point of events in the spark of the French Revolution.  The Bastille was a notorious prison in Eastern Paris.  Though at the time, it housed only 7 inmates, it was known also to be the place where the French authorities housed their arsenal of gunpowder.  Brutally murdering the prison warden and several guards, they also destroyed the stone prison by hand, symbolically dismantling the state of oppression that they faced.  Accessing the gunpowder, they took up arms previously looted from Les Invalides, leveling the playing field between them and the Ancien Regime.  Today all that remains of the Bastille prison is a brick outline of one of the towers, which can be found laid into the sidewalk surrounding the Place de Bastille.   It is one of the most important non-existent monuments in the history of democratic civilizations.  The events that transpired on that day reverberated throughout France, Europe and the New World, leaving a lasting impression that is deeply woven into the fabric of Western culture.
Picture
"Bastille Tower Brick Outline" by Holly Marie Armishaw, 2016
The events that led up to the storming of the Bastille are far too numerous and complex to explain in full detail in the context of this article.  As many of us know, the French people had grown discontent over the handling of public funds, leaving them destitute as they bore the weight of heavy taxation, while the nobility and clergy, who paid no taxes themselves, lived in luxury off the backs of the people.  An important historical fact that has often escaped the attention of most North Americans is that the French had been funding the American Revolution of Independence against the British.  This support was facilitated by Benjamin Franklin - the first Ambassador between the United States and France.  Of course, the French had their own political motivations, as they did not want to see the British gain further territories, and provided financial support until their own coffers were bare.  Unfortunately, this major fact goes largely unacknowledged as the more popular story is that the Queen of France, Marie Antoinette, and her love of fashion and luxury, drove the country to bankruptcy.  While it certainly didn't help matters, that would have to be one heck of a wardrobe!  The fact is that the state of financial distress had been handed down to Marie Antoinette and her husband, Louis XVI through the hands of his grandfather, Louis XIV.  Also known as the Sun King, it was Louis XIV, who built the fabulous Chateau Versailles, which is now a renowned symbol of the corrupt over-indulgence of those in power, and host to millions of tourists a year.  Consequently, his grandson, Louis XVI and his wife, Marie Antoinette, were executed by guillotine in 1793 during what would become known as the French Revolution.
Picture
"Palace Gates - Chateau Versailles" by Holly Marie Armishaw, 2014
The storming of the Bastille afforded the French people the opportunity to take up arms thereby forever altering the balance of power.  As the people no longer respected the established authority, of the nobility and clergy, arming themselves enabled them the ability to revolt and to defy the King’s Guard, who were expected to maintain order in the French capital and to protect the royal family.  It was seen as a necessity in the face of oppression by the corrupt absolute monarchy.  It is this incident and ideology that eventually made it’s way into the second amendment of the American Constitution – The Right to Bear Arms.  Though nothing can console us over the tragic and far too numerous mass shootings that occur in the United States each year, at least understanding the context of the historical events of the storming of the Bastille provides some illumination on the original ideals of the American NRA.
Picture
"Orrery" by Holly Marie Armishaw, 2014
The French Revolution was provoked not just out of discontent over an out-of-touch monarchy, but also largely by the ideas of the Enlightenment.  Many of the leading proponents of the Enlightenment era included philosophers, scientists, political theorists, and other intellectuals.  They opposed divine right and faith in favour of logic, reason, humanism and the scientific method.  They encouraged one another to question everything for themselves, to to come to logical conclusions, rather than simply believe what they are told.  With the newfound belief that they had a natural right to equality among men, the right to a life of liberty, and the respect for rights of other men, this brought about a sense of brotherly love, which encouraged men to do what was best for the common good, providing further incentives for the organization of fraternal orders.  The most famous of these fraternities, the Freemasons, still exists today.  Enlightenment ideals spread like wildfire throughout France and the rest of Europe, causing many countries to ban fraternal organizations for fear of their “dangerous thinking” spreading to other nations as a new world order developed.
Though the very phrase “New World Order” seems to conjure notions of conspiracy theories, one need not look far, as it hides in plain sight.  The proponents of the Revolution saw the Ancien Regime as needing to be replaced and the Americas, a popular place for new settlements, were then known as the New World.  “Ancien” being French for “ancient”, and Regime, meaning “order”, referred to the system of absolute monarcy that they sought to replace with their own elected officials.  These were instrumental ideals of the Revolution, which took root in the newer settled lands of the Americas, a land that was untainted by the rule of an absolute monarchy.  At first the the Third Estate in France, (the first being the nobility, the second being the clergy and the third being everyone else) proposed the idea of a constitutional monarchy, as the British had already established.  However, when it became clear that King Louis VXI had no intention of caving to these demands, he was executed for treason against France.  It was said that "The King must die so that the Revolution may live".  His wife, Marie Antoinette was also to face the same fate on the guillotine.  Thousands more died on this new killing machine that became known as the "National Razor" during the Reign of Terror.  Anyone that was suspected of sympathy to the monarchy, or as an enemy of the Revolution, was quickly tried and often sent to their death.  As news of the beheading of the monarchs spread throughout Europe and North America, other monarchs feared similar uprisings.  In Canada, the British suppressed this news from their citizens, in fear of a similar violent uprising. 
Picture
"Marie Antoinette - Praying for Guidance in the Face of Revolution and Insurrection" by Holly Marie Armishaw (2011-12)
As the Revolution gained momentum in Paris, the people organized and adopted a symbol to identify their allegiance to the Revolution.  The color red was added to the previous colors of France, blue and white and became known as the “Tricoloure”.  Some historians contend that the white of the flag represented the color of the House of Bourbon, the French royal family, while blue represented the spiritual.  Though there is still much debate as to the meaning of those colors, one could speculate that the red of the tricolor symbolizes the blood that had to flow in order for the Revolution to live.  Today the tricoloure is seen not only on the French national flag, but also on the American flag.  Given that France was the first ally of the United States, it comes as no surprise that the U.S. flag bears the same colors as those of the French flag and the colors of the Revolution.
Picture
"Liberty Leading the People" by Eugene Delacroix, 1830
The French and the American Revolutions bear many striking similarities.  Both were strongly influenced by the ideals of the Enlightenment and both resulted in the establishment of a bill or charter of rights.  The French "Declaration of the Rights of Man" (and of the Citizen) was passed in August of 1789, shortly after the storming of the Bastille.  One of the most defining articles was the idea of liberty: "Article IV - Liberty consists of doing anything which does not harm others: thus, the exercise of the natural rights of each man has only those borders which assure other members of the society the enjoyment of these same rights. These borders can be determined only by the law."  The similarity to the American Declaration of Independence of 1772 is obvious, which states "We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness."  How unfortunate that in the year 2016, we face so many challenges to these simple rights, under constant threats of police brutality, racial profiling, gun violence and acts of terrorism.
The single, most important aspect of the French Revolution was of course the outcome.  Following a long battle that cost many lives, France was transformed from being an Absolute Monarchy to becoming a Republic of the People, a Democracy.  The revolutionary action took power from the hands of the few and placed it into the hands of many.  The French Revolution has served for over 200 years as a reminder of the power of the “common” people to rise up against oppression and together accomplish “uncommon” feats through determination, collective organization.  It is that spirit, which is captured in the French motto “Liberté, égalité, fraternité “ (liberty, equality, fraternity), that daring achievement, that shaped much of the democratic ideals that Western civilization holds so dear to this day as a result of the fire that was sparked by the actions of Bastille Day, 1789.  However, the most important debate that they French Revolution has indelibly impressed upon the Western World is  with is the question of "at what cost of human life?" should we fight for what we believe.
This article is sadly dedicated to the men, women and children who lost life and limb in the terror attack in Nice on Bastille Day of 2016 while celebrating the most cherished of democratic ideals.
Picture
"Nice, France" (2014) photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
0 Comments

10 Days of Contemporary Art in Paris - Summer 2016

29/6/2016

0 Comments

 
Forget any misconceptions that you might have about Paris being a city filled with dusty old museums full of art created by long since deceased artists.  Paris has one of the most incredible international contemporary art scenes in the world!  With an impressive diversity of work to be found by renowned artists from across the globe, it is no surprise that major art dealers like Gagosian and Mary Goodman have locations here in Paris.  The smorgasbord of temporary exhibitions available here are enough to keep any art aficionado satiated for a prolonged length of time.  Here are 10 days of recommendations, which you will find spaced throughout this dynamic city.
Day 1:  Foundation Louis Vuitton
 
The Foundation Louis Vuitton, owned by LVMH, is a great example of one the major corporate sponsorships of the arts, as is so often seen in Europe.  The highly anticipated spectacular building, designed by renowned architect Frank Gehry, opened in the fall of 2014.  It is located at the far West side of Paris near the edge of the Bois de Boulogne.  The exterior of the Foundation Louis Vuitton has recently been transformed by French artist Daniel Buren through a site-specific installation of grand proportions, patterning the glass façade with colored films in his signature modernist repetitive aesthetic.  However the best feature of FLV, of course, lies within the glass walls.  The current exhibition features contemporary Chinese artists including Yang Fudong, Ai Wei and many others.  The most impressive feature may be two large works by artist Zhang Huan who uses incense ash gathered from Buddhist temples from his home city in his work.  Using the ashes on linen, the artist has created what at close scale looks like a scattering of debris, but at far range comes into focus as historical scenes of Tiananmen Square and another of the Chinese people digging a massive canal.  Painting, sculpture, video and animation run throughout the exhibit.
Picture
"1959 National Day" Detail (2010) by Zhang Huan, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Picture
"1959 National Day" (2010) by Zhang Huan, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Day 2 and 3: The Marais
 
The Marais, also known as the 3rd and 4th arrondisments of Paris, has the highest concentration of contemporary art galleries in the city.  Renowned international dealers like Emmanuel Perrotin, Thaddeus Ropac, Marion Goodman, and many, many others have spaces here.  Some of them, limited by the scale of the historical architecture, have two spaces in close proximity to one another.  Many of the world’s most prestigious artists are shown in these galleries as well as young talents.  Pick up a gallery guide at your first stop for a detailed list of all the current contemporary art exhibitions in the city.  To see them all in detail will likely take two full days.  The galleries themselves are often very discreet from the street and difficult to locate unless you know what you are looking for.  Watch for small bronze plaques bearing the gallery names on the walls outside courtyard gates.  It is in these discreet spaces that you will experience the height of the Parisan contemporary art scene.
Picture
Vernissage at Gallery Perrotin (Courtyard), June 2016, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Day 4: Palais de Tokyo
 
The Palais de Tokyo, named after the now non-existent avenue it was built upon, features temporary exhibitions of French and international contemporary art.  The Palais de Tokyo has become the most dynamic hub in the city featuring a broad program of that includes exhibitions, site-specific installations, performances, collaborative projects, film screenings and lectures.  Memorable exhibitions here include those by Ryan Gander, Thomas Hirschorn, Hiroshi Sugimoto and others.  A suite of new exhibitions has just opened, filling the altered basement with works by David Ryan & Jérôme Joy, Dineo Seshee Bopape, Marguerite Humeau, Ayoung Kim, Mika Rottenberg, and Michel Houellebecq.  The Palais de Tokyo is open late, which is perfect also because they have a fantastic restaurant, Monsier Blue.  If you make reservations and the weather is pleasant, you may be able to sit on the terrace, which provides a spectacular view capping off a perfect evening at the Palais.
Day 5: The First Quarter
 
One of the greatest joys of Paris is that the arts of all types are made readily accessible to the public, if you know where to look.  Though the first arrondisment is most noted for the world-famous Louvre, it is not without it’s contemporary art treasures scattered about.  In fact, the Lourve often collaborates with notable local galleries and has featured some phenomenal projects.  This summer one can view a site-specific installation by artist JR at the Lourve Pyramid that has made European art news headlines.  A detailed stroll through the adjacent Tuileries gardens often holds a few surprises.  Among them, a Lawrence Weiner permanent installation along the North wall, adjacent to the Rue de Rivoli.  At the end of the Tuileries lies the Jeu de Paume, a historical building known as the place where the Tennis Court Oath was signed, it is now a dedication photography gallery featuring temporary exhibitions of notable international photographers.  Nearby in the courtyard of the Palais Royale one can view a permanent installation by French artist Chris Burden while sipping rosé in the afternoon sun at one of the café terraces.
Picture
JR at the Louvre Pyramid, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw, June 2016
Day 6: Chateau Versailles
 
The French are a world leader in cultural fusions, creating hybrid collaborations that marry contemporary art with music, fashion, design, architecture, and history.  Summer is the best time to visit Chateau Versailles, which is a mere half hour train ride from Paris.  Versailles has a program that allows for one chosen artist per year to work with the palace or it’s spectacular gardens where a grand exhibition of their work is installed.  Imagine strolling the intricate and historic gardens designed by French landscape artist Andre Le Notre in the 18th century and coming upon a sculpture by Takashi Murakami!  Other artists featured at Chateau Versailles include Jeff Koons, Bernar Venet among others.  This summer features Danish-Icelandic artist Olafur Elliason.  While some of the works are so subtle that you might now realize that you are looking right at them, others mesmerize tremendous crowds.  Working with elements such as light, mirrors, fog, water, and earth, his installations are cleverly interwoven into the history of the chateau itself.
Picture
Olafur Eliasson’s “Your Sense of Unity” (2016), Hall of Mirrors, Chateau Versailles, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Day 7: Les Grandes Magasins
 
North of the Opera lay some of Paris’s most renowned department stores, featuring designer labels from around the world.   Les Grandes Magasins are, in themselves, an experience, especially by North American shopping mall standards.  While many go for the shopping, and stay for tea at Laduree in Printemps, or lunch under the stained glass domes, there is more.  Galeries Lafayette has it’s own exhibition space, aptly known as Galerie des Galeries.  This is a vibrant contemporary art space that often features the work of local Parisian artists and allows an opportunity for experimental art projects of the highest caliber.  This summer features TOILETPAPER, a collaboration between Maurizio Cattelan and Pierpaolo Ferrari, which opens on July 6th.

Day 8: Saint-Germain de Près
 
Though Saint-Germain has many galleries, most are of a more decorative or design oriented type.  However, one of Paris’s best contemporary art dealers also has not one, but two spaces there.  Kamel Mennour represented an impressive stable of artists that include Anish Kapoor, Jake & Dinos Chapman, François Morellet and Duchamp Prize Winner Latifah Echakchch.  An exhibition of profound and stunning works by Japanese-Korean artist Lee Ufan recently opened at Galerie Kammel Mennour's 28 avenue Matignon space.  These minimalist works are both profound and stunning.  Nearby at Mennour's initial space at 28 avenue Matignon, an exhibition of photographs by controversial artist Nobuyoshi Araki are on view.
Picture
Lee Ufan “Dialogue”, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw, June 2016
Day 9: The Pompidou Centre
 
Although the Pompidou Centre’s mandate is focused on modern art, some of the most impressive curated exhibitions of contemporary art that I have ever seen have been here at the Pomipdou.  Excellent examples of both French and international artists work can be seen here.  The Pompidou Centre’s partnership with ADIF (Association for the International Diffusion of French Contemporary Art) allows for the annual winner of the Prix Marcel Duchamp to have a solo exhibition.  For those who don’t already know, the Prix Marcel Duchamp is France’s version of the U.K.’s Turner Prize.  The 2015 Laureate’s exhibition Melik Ohanian’s “Under Shadows” is currently on view in a fusion between poetry and science in an environment that expresses various dimensions.

Day 10: Paris Pantin
 
Though it may be a bit of a trek into unknown territory, it is well worth it to take the journey to Paris’s Pantin area.  As in any major city, real estate is at its prime rates in the most dense urban areas, so gallerists often seek space outside the core, transforming less desirable neighborhoods into vibrant, eclectic hubs of art and culture.  Thaddeus Ropac, for example, has opened a large project space in Pantin.  Other dealers like Jocelyn Wolfe and Creve Cœur have their main spaces located here.   The truly dedicated art professional will make the journey to Pantin.
 
By the time you have completed this itinerary, you will have seen some of the most important contemporary and historical neighborhoods of Paris, although this list is by no means exhausted.  Paris is an exceptional hub of cultural diversity at any time of the year, but the summer months are when it is most delightful to wander the city.  However, during the month of August is when most Parisians take their annual vacations and head for beachfront destinations.  You will find most galleries have closed their doors for the entire month, to resume their business again come September. 

Picture
Artists ORLAN (right) and Holly Marie Armishaw (left) in Paris, June 2016, photographer unknown
- Holly Marie Armishaw (June 2016)

Holly Marie Armishaw is a Vancouver-based contemporary artist primarily using photography and digital imaging to create imaginary realms and states of being.  She is also an independent scholar on art, history and culture.

0 Comments

The Timely Art of Shirin Neshat

8/3/2016

0 Comments

 
In an era marked by global political tensions between East and West, Shirin Neshat is one of the most poignantly relevant artists today.  However, given the current political climate, it is easy to misread the “Women of Allah” series, which first brought her notoriety as an artist.  A series of black and white images, containing four unifying visual elements: a woman donned in the traditional Islamic veil or chador, a rifle or Kalashnikov, poetry written in Farsi, and a gaze that confronts the viewer.  One would be mistaken to assume that these are portraits of female Islamic radicals or jihadists.  The complexity of the works requires some knowledge of the context in which they were created.  Firstly, “Women of Allah” was created between 1994- 97, several years before the pivotal turning point of 9/11 and the ensuing onslaught of Islamaphobia.
Picture
"Speechless" from the "Women of Allah" series, 1996, Shirin Neshat
Born in Iran in 1957, Neshat grew up under the rule of Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi who embraced Western ideologies and supported reforms that encouraged the education of women and instituted family laws to be more favourable towards women.  In Neshat’s late teens, during the mid 1970’s, her father sent her to the U.S. to pursue higher education in Los Angeles, California.  A few years later, the Islamic Revolution of 1979 broke out.  Citizens had grown weary of the Shah’s autocratic methods of governance and his lack of regard for the Islamic religion.  Unfortunately, his embrace of modernity and Westernism was tainted by this autocractic disregard for democratic methods.  Initially, many Iranian women began wearing the veil in the 70's as a form of protest against the Shah, both exhibiting the love of their religion and their rejection of the Shah's Western ideologies.  However, after the Islamic Revolution, suddenly women no longer had a choice.  The man that they had democratically placed in power, whom they put their trust in to uphold their values, turned on them, took away many of the rights and privileges that these women had grown up with, and, almost symbolically so, it became mandatory that women wear the veil in public at all times.
“In a way, by studying a woman, you can read the structure and the ideology of the country.”  Shirin Neshat; Ted Talks
In 1991 Shirin Neshat was finally able to return to Iran and to be with her family.  But, Neshat has repeatedly said in public presentations, she no longer recognized her homeland, which had transformed into a state of Islamic fundamentalism.  Perhaps one of the most glaringly obvious visual signifiers of this theocratic transformation may have been that the face of women were literally, no longer visible.  In her talk at Princeton University Neshat stated “The women of Iran, historically, seem to embody the political transformations”.  She returned to the U.S. not so much inspired as compelled by the transformation that she had witnessed.  And so, in 1993, she began working on her “Women of Allah” series.  
Upon examining each of the four elements that appear in the works it seems that In their entirety the work is loaded with symbolism and fraught with contradictions.  The veil is simultaneously a symbol of repression and a rejection of Western ideology.  While many Westerners believe that the veil it is simply a repressive garment, the contradictory notion is that when covered, women are free from the repression of being an object of sexual desire through the male gaze.  Feminist Iranian poetry is written on the women’s faces, feet and hands, in essence “covering” those parts of a woman’s body, which are required to be covered.  But the covering by text in these works allows the women a voice where they are otherwise silenced.  The texts themselves are poems of female martyrdom by an Iranian woman, Tahereh Saffarzadeh.  Interestingly Neshat creates a contradiction because in Islamic Fundamentalist countries, “martyr” is a term most commonly reserved for men, whereas women are more likely to be ascribed the term “victim”.
Shirin Neshat states that she feels ambivalent about martyrdom.  While she is proud of the women of her homeland for challenging authority, there is a contradiction that she has captured in her portraits – the softness and beauty of their young skin with the coldness of the rifles, symbol of cruelty, violence and death.  She has found inspiration in the resilience of Iranian women who fought to defend their borders when Iraq attacked Iran in 1980, hoping to take advantage at the point of political instability, in what is now known as the Persian Gulf War.  Women have also been at the forefront of peaceful demonstrations, banding together in several protests including the Green Movement and the Arab Spring.  It is these women that Neshat admires for their courage.

Without forgetting her own Western education and influence, and having gone to university in the U.S. at the crux of second-wave feminism in the 1970’s, Shirin Neshat has imbued her subjects with a gaze that simultaneously confronts and defies the male gaze.  Perhaps the most poignant image in the series is this one pictured below, in which the face of the women is bisected by the barrel of the rifle, just as Shirin Neshat’s own life and has been bisected by Islamic and Western influences.
Picture
"Rebellious Silence", 1994, from the "Women of Allah" series, Shirin Neshat
Exiled from her homeland of Iran since 1996, Shirin Neshat has been living a nomadic lifestyle as an artist.  Her oeuvre has extended beyond the still photograph into film and video.  Her 2009 film “Women Without Men” won the Silver Lion Prize for Best Directing at the Venice Film Festival.  Although shot in Morocco due to Shirin’s ban from Iran, the film takes us back to the Iranian capital of Tehran to a pivotal time in Iranian history, which informs much of Neshat’s earlier work.  It is set in 1953, the year when a coup d’etat encouraged and backed by British and American armed forces overthrew Iran’s then democratically elected president and instated the Shah as ruler of Iran.
Picture
"Women Without Men" 2009, feature film still, Shirin Neshat
Continuing to explore gender roles of Iranian women, “Women Without Men” follows the tale of four women of varying age and class, brought together by a rejection of male oppression.  Munis, who is interested in political activism, lives under the tyranny of her brother who tells her that he will break her legs if she leaves the house, eventually driving her to dive off the roof of their home, or at least imagines she does.  The novel the filmis based upon draws upon "creative realism" allowing Munis to come back from her suicide in a second life where she comes as goes wherever she desires, at free will.  Munis's best friend, Faezeh, is raped by two men one afternoon after gazing into a cafe where women are not allowed; she is understandably traumatized after the event.  The young Zarin is confined to a life of enslavement as a prostitute, ravaging both her physical and mental health.  Fakhri an older, upper-class housewife of a military general, is told by her husband that if she can no longer satisfy him sexually, he will take a younger wife.  Having the most liberty of all the women featured, she leaves him, purchasing a villa in the countryside as a place for escape to begin a new life free from his presence and repression.  Seeking refuge 3 of the women eventually find each other in the orchard and recover together in the villa where they can exist in freedom, without their veils of oppression.  However, when men arrive at the orchard one night for a party, their secure haven is “raped” by their presence.  The most fragile of them, Zarin, loses her life, perhaps in fear that she will never be safe.  The film was adapted from the novel by Iranian author Shahrnush Parsipur, which is banned in Iran.
Picture
"Women Without Men" (2009) Film Still, Shirin Neshat
The film "Women Without Men" exemplifies the strong, beautiful, and poignant style that has marked the still photographic works of Shirin Neshat.  With its myriad of layers, the film is infinitely complex - weaving together both national and gender politics.  No two characters are alike - ranging from the most traditional Islamic young women who are still virgins as they near the age of 30 and won't (or can't leave) their homes without a suitable escort or donning a chandor, to the very Westernized, culturally elite older woman who enters public places like restaurants without a veil, smokes cigarettes, listens to music and sings, purchases property without her husbands presence, drives about in an American automobile, and throws parties for the like of artists, actors, and other well-to do socialites. 

The film beautifully captures the depth of each character and their internal states through a physical terrain.  Drawing from Shirin Neshat's earlier use of poetic symbolism, this physical terrain is poetically depicted in the forms of the hard concrete streets and buildings of Tehran; a long, lonely road leading to the possibility of change; a wall that separates the orchard from the outside world (as seen above) with an opening small enough to enter as water flows freely through it; the dark, barren forest; the dense foggy marsh that Zarin is found floating nearly dead in (seen below); and the lush jungle-like garden which rays of sunshine pierce through in a stroke of optimisim.  The orchard becomes a place where these women can escape their veils of oppression, as so poignantly conveyed by the veil dropped outside the wall.
Picture
"Women Without Men" (2009) film still, Shirin Neshat
Outside the garden walls, back in the city, all is not well as the political climate comes to a boil.  Like a barometer throughout the film, Zarin's health, which had been improving in her new surroundings of hope, finally takes a turn for the worst as the military clashes with the Iranian citizens, overthrowing the democratic government and instating the Shah to power. 

"This film is dedicated to the memory of those who lost their lives in the struggle for freedom and democracy in Iran from the Constitutional Revolution of 1906 to the Green Movement of 2009." (Women Without Men)
Bibliography:
 
Humanitas: Shirin Neshat at the University of Oxford, Lecture – YouTube https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pySIgzyDvKk&ebc=ANyPxKqxD84_4HLSkW-CRBpZ0Zquxn01rKDkoF8oTad2Y4kGQ7Yosp9emoOAYwM94h3bkowldKKLDhNqosW66U4FAhZZJTU7Aw
 
Shirin Neshat: Art in exile – YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4YS3gGpnPe8

http://womenwithoutmen.blog.indiepixfilms.com/
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iranian_Revolution
 
http://blog.movements.org/how-iranian-women-are-dealing-with-their-oppression/
 
Shirin Neshat, Women of Allah Series https://teachartwiki.wikispaces.com/Shirin+Neshat,+Women+of+Allah+Series
 
Green Women of Iran: The Role of the Women’s Movement During and After Iran’s Presidential Election of 2009
https://www.sssup.it/UploadDocs/18086_7_S_Green_Women_of_Iran_The_Role_of_the_Women_s_Movement_During_and_After_Iran_s_Presidential_Election_of_2009_Victoria_Tahmasebi_Birgani_13.pdf
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women's_rights_in_Iran#Women_and_the_Iranian_Revolution
 
https://www.lib.uchicago.edu/e/webexhibits/iranianposters/womenandchildren.html
 
http://isismagazine.org.uk/2014/07/women-of-allah-an-interview-with-exiled-artist-shirin-neshat/
 
http://www.washingtoncitypaper.com/articles/47170/shirin-neshat-facing-history-at-the-hirshhorn-reviewed-in-her/
 
http://www.gladstonegallery.com/artist/shirin-neshat/work
 
http://www.gladstonegallery.com/artist/shirin-neshat/biography
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_Without_Men_(2009_film)
 
http://womenwithoutmen.blog.indiepixfilms.com/about/
 
The 'beauty' and the horror of the Iran-Iraq war - BBC News
http://www.bbc.com/news/magazine-34353349
 
Iran's Basij Sisters suppressed election protests https://www.alarabiya.net/articles/2009/08/05/80895.html
 
Iran–Iraq War - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iran%E2%80%93Iraq_War
 
Iran Chamber Society: Iranian Society: Women in Iran Since 1979
http://www.iranchamber.com/society/articles/women_iran_since_1979.php
 
When Walls Come Falling Down: Left Political Art Timeline, 1989-2000
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/g-roger-denson/9892000_b_1422848.html

Iran: Women protest against forced wearing of hijab, 1979
http://www.jihadwatch.org/2014/04/iran-women-protest-against-forced-wearing-of-hijab-1979
 
Iran's Women A Driving Force Behind Green Movement
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/07/24/irans-women-a-driving-for_n_244218.html
 
In Iran, One Woman's Death May Have Many Consequences – TIME
http://content.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1906049,00.html
 
Accidental Martyrdom and the Ambiguous Death Image of the Role of Iranian Women | iranianstudies.com

http://iranianstudies.com/content/accidental-martyrdom-and-ambiguous-death-image-role-iranian-women

Iraq's war on women | openDemocracy
https://www.opendemocracy.net/conflict-iraqconflict/women_2681.jsp
 
BBC NEWS | Middle East | Iran-Iraq war: Iraqi women's stories
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/4268530.stm
 
Women's rights in Iran - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women%27s_rights_in_Iran#Women_and_the_Iranian_Revolution
 
Shirin Neshat | Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society
http://signsjournal.org/shirin-neshat/
 
Shirin Neshat, Rebellious Silence, Women of Allah series | Asia, Africa, Europe, Latin America and the Middle East | Khan Academy
https://www.khanacademy.org/humanities/global-culture/identity-body/identity-body-europe/a/neshat-rebellious

0 Comments

The Invaluable Message of "I Am Malala"

7/1/2016

0 Comments

 

Critics have compared “I Am Malala” to the iconic historical autobiography “Anne Frank’s Diary”.  The former is an autobiography of a young girl growing up in a Pakistani village as the Taliban seizes control.  So pertinent to this era, Malala’s story sheds light on a perspective that no major media agency could ever hope to.  It is an invaluable reminder that the spread of Islamic radicalization affects more than just global superpowers; it is about more than just the cost of oil, international politics, or the growing threat of terrorism against Westerners.  It is about the imposition of radical and repressive systems on an otherwise peaceful way of life for millions of ordinary people in the countries throughout which it spreads.
As an exceptionally bright young girl, Malala had a particularly broad perspective on the political situation in Pakistan.  She was the daughter of a hard-working teacher who struggled to open and run a private school that would teach children comprehension and critical skills far beyond that of the local public schools mere rote-learning methods, enabling Malala to develop her keen perspective and critical tongue.  With a curriculum that included learning the art of public speaking, it was there that she found her voice.  Malala takes us through the journey of her and her family as their Pashtun village undergoes a process of change similar to that of frogs in a pot of water as it is slowly brought to a boil.  She and her father are vocal, yet virtually helpless, as religious devotion and ignorance are used against the local population.
Picture
Book Design by Marie Mundaca, Photo of Book by Holly Marie Armishaw
Using a dedicated radio station, which soon became the only one allowed, the Talibs (religious men) quickly had the entire Swat valley abiding by their every word.  They encouraged the burning of CD’s, DVD’s and TV’s and the shops that sold them were shut down in an attempt to isolate the public from knowledge and to deter Western influence.  Citizens were either publically praised or shamed for following or ignoring the teachings of the local on-air Mullah.  Vaccinations were banned and during Ramadan, the Taliban shutoff the electricity and clean water source, leaving many sick and dead from cholera.  They seized on opportunities like the devastating earthquake of October 2005 in Pakistan to take the newly orphaned and homeless children into madrasas (religious schools) where they trained them in military jihadism.  Curfews were established and strict rules of purdah were imposed. 

It is women who were subject to the strictest interpretation of purdah.  Purdah, according to the Oxford Dictionaries, means “the practice in certain Muslim or Hindu societies of screening women from men or strangers, especially by means of a curtain” and/or “a state of seclusion or secrecy”.  It originated from early 19th century Perdu and the Persian word “parda” meaning veil or curtain.  The most common form of purdah outside of the home is a garment known as a burqa, which may or may not include a yashnak, a veil that conceals the face where the eyes may or may not be exposed.  One day in the market Malala’s mother and cousin were stopped by a Talib. “ ‘If I see you wearing a scarf but no burqa I will beat you,’ he said.  My mother is not easily scared and remained composed.  ‘Yes, OK.  We will wear burqas in the future,’ she told him.  My mother always covers her head, but the burqa is not part of our Pashtun tradition.”[1]  At first women were required to leave the house only when accompanied by a male family member, but later were banned from the market entirely and told that they should not leave the home except in an emergency. 

“Then MMA activists launched attacks on cinemas and tore down billboards with pictures of women or blackened them out with paint.  They even snatched female mannequins from clothing shops.  They harassed men wearing western-style shirts instead of the traditional shalwar kamiz and insisted that women cover their heads.  It was as though they wanted to remove all traces of womankind from public life.”[2]

Public whippings were witnessed for the first time.  Bodies began to appear in the “bloody” square each morning, for everyone to see on their way to work.  The greatest impositions were placed on the most vulnerable – women and girls.  “One day I saw my father and his friends watching a video on his phone.  It was a shocking scene.  A teenage girl wearing a black burqa and red trousers was lying face down on the ground and being flogged in broad daylight by a bearded man in a black turban.  ‘Please stop it! She begged in Pashto between screams and whimpers as each blow was delivered.  ‘In the name of Allah, I am dying!’  You could hear the Taliban shouting, ‘Hold her down.  Hold her hands down.’…They hit her thirty-four times.  A crowd had gathered but did nothing.  One of the woman’s relatives even volunteered to hold her down.’ “  The local Khan confirmed that the film was genuine.  “She came out of her house with a man who was not her husband, so we had to punish her,’ he said, ‘Some boundaries cannot be crossed.’ “[3]

Malala had been reading the Quran, creating a direct translation from Arabic to her native tongue of Urdu, allowing her to “know” the Quran and it’s teachings first-hand.  However, the majority of Pakistani followers of Islam cannot speak of read Arabic, and so were ignorant to the misinterpretations being broadcast by the local Mullah.

As the Taliban further imposed their agenda, hundreds of schools were burned throughout the country.  Living in constant fear that theirs would be next, Malala’s father, Ziauddin, was told to close down his school, as it was “haram” (sinful).   One day seven men came to their house and declared  ‘I am representing good Muslims and we all think your girls school is haram and a blasphemy.  You should close it.  Girls should not be going to school,’ he continued.  ‘A young girl is so sacred that she should be in purdah, and so private that there is no lady’s name in the Quran, as God doesn’t want her to be named.’ “[4]   After shooting down his argument with a prime example of a woman in the Quran, Ziauddin refused to succumb to the pressure, and received frequent death threats as a result.   However, it was Malala who would eventually be targeted and shot.

Having a keen passion for learning, the encouragement of her father, a solid comprehension of the Quran, and the understanding of the dangers of the misguided interpretations and teachings of the Taliban, Malala became an out-spoken advocate for the education of girls, for all children.  She recognized the irony that Talibs believed that girls should be educated by women and treated by women doctors, but that if they weren’t allowed to go to school, then they would never be able to fill those positions. 

It is precisely because Malala’s account of life under Islamic radicalism is not unique, similar to Anne Frank's account under Nazi rule, that it is so important.  Of course, Malala's reaction was nothing short of heroic, which makes her an exceptional role model for social consciousness across the globe.  And while she is most noted for advocating education for girls, particularly in developing countries, it is not just that girls should have a right to education, everyone should have a right to education.  Advocating education as a basic humanitarian right is Malala’s solution to establishing worldwide peace.  The act of denying education to certain groups of people in order to repress them is nothing new in tactics of war.  Keeping people ignorant so that they are unable to make educated decisions about their own lives, that of their family’s and that of their country’s, enables others control over the fate of others.  Malala, through her message, is lifting that veil of ignorance.


[1] Yousafzai, Malala.  “I Am Malala” (New York: Bay Back Books, 2013), pg. 169

[2] Yousafzai, pg. 97.

[3] Yousafzai, pg. 170-71.

[4] Yousafzai, pg. 94.

0 Comments

Art Basel Miami Beach - The Experience

26/11/2014

0 Comments

 
Picture
Artwork by Holly Marie Armishaw (copyright 2012)
Art Basel Miami Beach is not just an art fair, it is an experience like no other!  Basel Miami, as it is better known, has become a phenomena, a celestial body upon which many smaller fairs orbit around.  These satellite fairs now number at 20 and are growing in number each year.  They feed off the proximity of Basel Miami and location costs are priced accordingly.  Hotel prices are also based on this proximity as jet-setters and art-world glitterati from across the globe will pay a premium to be within walking distance to "the sun".  Not to be confused with Miami proper, Miami Beach, or to be exact, South Beach, also known coloquially as SoBe, is the place to be in during the first week of December.

The original Art Basel is based at it's namesake, Basel, Switzerland and is held annually each June.  As the European art market sought to bridge the gap with the American Market, they established Art Basel in Miami Beach.  Reaching further still into the global market, their most recent establishment is Art Basel Hong Kong.  What makes this fair different is that it is so much more than just another fair.  Every nearby museum director, hotelier, restauranteur, retailer and professional driver prepares and braces themselves for the massive influx of this special breed of tourists that descend upon them at this time each year.  If these are your people, this is our heaven.

What could be better for an art lover than leaving your daily routine, whether it be bustling city life, frozen temperatures or both, to arrive at this mecca of contemporary art world insiders.  Under the intoxicating sunshine of South Beach, the transformation of the island is evident every where.  Installations are strategically placed in nearly every purposed or non-purposed space.  While the days are filled with aisle upon aisle of gallery booths, the evenings are a must "see and be seen", with countless VIP previews, parties, happenings, museum openings, and if you're lucky and can squeeze it in, fabulous dinners.  Art Basel Miami is a marathon - rest for a moment, and you will surely miss something spectacular.

The main attraction is of course Art Basel Miami Beach - the fair itself for which the entirity of the spectacle is often referred as.  The better integrated you are in the industry, the earlier you can get in to experience the fair.  The gates are first opened by invitation only on a Wednesday throughout the day to the top collectors - this is the first buying opportunity given only to those who are proven as the most serious blue-chip art collectors.  Anyone else is simply in the way, and understandably unwelcome.  That same evening, the VIP Preview opens and the second sector is allowed in - press, collectors, consultants, and other VIP guests.  In 2011, I was fortunate enough to receive a coveted pair of VIP tickets.

Once inside the hierarchy is evident in another form.  Those galleries with the the most powerful names in the art world and the most investment capital will be the first that you encounter - Gagosian Gallery, Marion Goodman, Hauser + Wirth, Lisson Gallery, Emmanuel Perrotin, Thaddeus Ropac, Matthew Marks, Yvon Lambert - they have paid top dollar to get the prime booth locations.  Rest assured, each and every gallery there has earned their position.  There are a limited number of 247 booths and no matter how much money you are willing to spend, if your gallery has not been approved by their selection committee, no amount of money will get you a booth inside those walls.  Fail to live up to the high expectations of the fair one year, and you will not be invited back the next.  In essence, we have at our disposal a very carefully curated selection of the world's most influential galleries, representing the world's best artists of the moment, all under one roof.  Years of traveling from exhibition to exhibition could not afford you this same opportunity that is carefully designed and presented to you on a golden platter, complete with champagne carts circulating the fair.
Picture
"Fear" by Damien Hirst, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw 2011
Picture
Vacuum by Jeff Koons, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
At Basel Miami you will find each and every contemporary blue chip artist that you can name.  Their works have popped off the pages the top art magazines and museum catalogues and have come out to awe you with their tactile presence.  Damien Hirst, Anish Kapoor, Jeff Koons, Tracey Emin, Marina Abramavich, Cindy Sherman, Ai Wei Wei...they are all here, some of them, even in the flesh.  For those who want to delve deeper into the current threads in contemporary art, Art Basel curates a series of panel discussions with leading artists, critics other industry experts.
Picture
Art Basel -Conversations: Art and Poetry with Tracey Emin and others, moderated by Hans Ulrich Obrist, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw 2011
While there is a sense of comfort with the familiarity of seeing the work of acclaimed artists, the greatest experience, in my opinion, is to discover the work of artists whom I have not yet encountered before.  With row upon row of bright colours and iconic, eye-catching styles, if one caves to the temptation, or races through the aisles with the attention span of an ADD kid in a candy shop, you are bound to miss something great.  As an artist it is a sad realization to see the majority of works receive little more than 2 seconds to capture each viewers attention before they are on to the next.  If you take the time to lend yourself to the work, explore the imagery, read the titles and explore the details, you will often be pleasantly surprised.  If you only visit the artists with whose work you are already familiar with, you will learn nothing from the experience.  The most enriching experiences will be found where you least expect them.

Admittedly, it is tough spending the day inside a windowless convention centre, no matter how fantastic the art.  All sense of time is lost as we wonder why our feet hurt and our stomachs are growling.  To hold our attention for as long as possible, creatively designed rest spots and over-priced nourishment are available.  Eventually fatigue sets in and even a $20 glass of champagne can no longer hold my attention as we begin to clamor for a breath of outside life.
Picture
Jeppe Hein's "Disappearing Walls", photo by Holly Marie Armishaw 2013
Picture
Scott Reeder's "Real Fake", photo by Holly Marie Armishaw 2013
Rest assured, your appetite for art will not be left unfilled by your desire for fresh air and sunshine.  The nearby Bass Museum collaborates with Art Basel to hosts an outdoor sculpture garden.  The site specific and public art installations are free for all to enjoy and engage with.  Each year a selection of about a dozen artists are curated by Art Basel's "Public" sector.  Weary collectors take a break in the cool shade of a palm tree while resting on the furniture of Thomas Houseago's outdoor living room.  Children cool off in Jeppe Hein's installation where walls of water playfully appear and disappear, intermittently enclosing and freeing those who enter while Scott Reader's installation ironically calls out the elephant in the metaphorical room.  While the work is different each year, Collins Park remains as one of my favourite Basel Miami destinations.
Picture
NADA Party 2011, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
As each nightfall nears, South Beach gears up to welcome you to a host of different events.  With so many simultaneous art fairs, there is fierce competition to draw in the collectors.  Besides a VIP Preview for each art fair, there are also corresponding receptions at local museums, pop-up shops, happenings, performances, concerts and poolside cocktail parties under palm trees.  Arrive in South Beach without a plan, and you may find yourself left out of the most coveted events.  However with a range of extraordinary restaurants and night clubs, there is always something to do.  After hearing rave reviews about the famous Mr. Chow restaurant at the W Hotel, we stopped by one afternoon to make a reservation for later that night. Unfortunately, we were told "Sorry, but a someone has booked the entire restaurant for the night".  By midnight that same night, we found ourselves back at the W Hotel by invitation to the poolside Armani Party, only to find that the mystery man who had booked the entire Mr. Chow's earlier, was none other than actor Will Smith.  Celebrities have become a staple at Art Basel; they want to be where the scene is, and this is it.  Apparently they are also collecting art, as I learned this summer in Paris when trying to wrap my head around the idea that Wil Pharrell had curated a show at Galerie Perrotin.  Pharrell, who is an avid collector of Takeshi Murakami's work, made a connection with Murakami's Paris dealer Emmanuel Perrotin, when they met previously at Basel Miami.
Don't be afraid to get out of the central area of activity.  Wandering Westward will take you into the Art Deco district through miles of small boutique Art Deco style hotels, each painted in vibrant candy-coloured hues with vintage automobiles parked outside popular restaurants.  Many of the side fairs temporarily take over these hotels, providing more affordable spaces for younger galleries.  Beds and other furnishing are removed, walls are painted, and doors are left open as each room is inhabited by a different gallery.  Aqua Art Miami has become one of my favourite examples of this fair model.  As DJ's play in the open air motel courtyard, cheap drinks flow into plastic cups, and nude performance artists brush past us, we feel like we are in the midst of a Fellini film set.  The work is affordable and the artists approachable.  While not every space offers something spectacular, there are definitely pleasant surprises of artists who deserve more recognition.  I was delighted to encounter once again, the work of Korean pop artist Mari Kim, whose work I had seen in at "Shine Artists: London" that summer.  She was there and we were able to meet to discuss her work.
Picture
Aqua Art Fair, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw 2011
Picture
Artwork by Mari Kim at Aqua Art Fair, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw 2013
No experience of Basel Miami is complete without mention of the hotels.  I'm not just referring to the hotels and motels that become makeshift fair grounds - I'm referring to the Hotels who are a living work of art in themselves.  In recent years a new aesthetic has taken over the world of 5-star hotels - fun has become the new chic!  International superstar designers like Paris's Phillipe Starck and Amsterdam's Marcel Wanders bring their uniquely playful styles to South Beach.  With a sophisticated fusion of international influences, contemporary art and design these hotels are as glamorous as their guests.  At the Mondrian, Basel Miami-goers can continue to chill outdoors under the warm night air in Wanders outdoor living room as they watch the sun rise.  Shortly after falling asleep late one night, around 3:30 am we were suddenly awoken by the sound of a woman screaming.  As the screaming continued as she were being murdered, hotel guests jumped out of of bed and flocked to their balconies.  It was only after the rhythmic screams crescendoed after what felt like an eternity, that we were all able to get back to sleep.
Picture
The Mondrian Hotel, designed by Marcel Wanders, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw 2011
Picture
The Mondrian Hotel, designed by Marcel Wanders, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw 2011
In the mornings as the bustle begins again, tables full of gallery staff congregate with intensity as they plan their sales strategies for the day.  Familiar faces begin to appear as my first Americano of the day starts to take affect.  To the left a certain highly influential NY dealer has brunch with his wife and baby, to the right, a familiar crazy haired artist frantically waves down his server for the bill.  As we leave the breakfast dining room of the Fountainbleau one morning, we recognize the familiar face of Tracey Emin, separated from the press by a velvet rope.  We are just in time for the official unveiling of her new work, and of course my professional camera is still upstairs in our room; my I-Phone will have to do.  Emin was commissioned by the Fountainbleau Hotel to produce a new neon work, specific to Miami.  And for those who find her work, shall we say "out of reach", they have collaborated with her to produce a limited edition of flip flops that leave text-based impressions behind in the sand and a special edition beach towel - a steal at only $100 each.  Emin has recently bought a place in Miami and they have returned her love by granting her first solo American museum show at the MOCA NOMI (Museum of Contemporary Art North Miami) in conjunction with Basel Miami 2013.
Picture
Fountainbleau lobby with Ai Wei Wei Chandeliers, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw 2013
Picture
Tracey Emin's Unveiling at the the Fountainbleau Hotel, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw 2013
The Fountainbleau, once a location for a James Bond scene, doesn't just cater to the art market, it supports it.  The moment we entered I was impressed with the hotel my partner had chosen.  With three grandiose Ai Wei Wei chandeliers hanging from the lobby ceiling and six impressive 4 x 7' James Turrell installations behind the reception and concierge desks, I just had to pause for a lavender, lemon gin and tonic to enjoy them.  Other notable artists work found in the hotel include Doug Aitken and John Baldessari.  Equally stunning hotels that make up my list of favourites include the Delano by the aforementioned French interior designer Phillipe Starck, and his more recent magnum opus, the SLS, both part of an uber chic hotel group named SBE.   Even if you are not staying at any of these hotels, make time to check them out.  There is generally a vibrant night life at the back of the building, away from the prying eyes of Collins Ave.  The best outdoor lounges, with sophisticated cocktails and cozy cabanas can be enjoyed under the starlight.  The SLS boasts a fabulous restaurant and lounge scene in their exquisitely designed hotel.
Picture
Artwork by James Turrell at the Fountainbleau Hotel, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw 2013
Plan to get an early start each day if you are going to get through all 20 art fairs.  (Not a chance in hell!)  As the fairs only run for a period of 4 days, chose a couple per day.  If you're up early enough, get some time in to chill by the pool.  Trust me, with a perverse amount of choice and content, your will reach your art saturation point long before you've digested each booth in any given fair.  To mix it up try the Design District on the mainland for a combination of shopping for Koons tableware or a pair of Maison Martin Margiela hightop sneakers between perusing a couple of different nearby fairs.  This past year, in 2013 two of the longer standing fairs, Scope and Untitled, took to the sands of South Beach in massive tents.  After all, what's the point of being in South Beach if you never experience the beach itself?  There is quality work to be found at the side fairs, and less mediated by the slick marketing and presence of the blue-chip galleries.  Artists names are sometimes scrawled on the walls instead of carefully typed on adhesive labels, but it doesn't matter, the focus is on the work.  And when you tire of exploring the work, they provide outdoor lounges adjacent to the tent, looking out towards the sea, where you can enjoy a mid-day margarita as the sun sets.

When Basel Miami draws to an end and the exodus of art crowds head to the airport to return to their corresponding international places of residence, there is a sadness in the air.  By the next day, their is no longer the familiarity of having "my people" around.  No longer is anyone speaking French at the table next to me.  Business conventions begin filtering in and we are left alone to enjoy the beach before we say goodbye to South Beach.  But, we promise to be back!

- Holly Marie Armishaw (November 26, 2014)
Picture
South Beach, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw 2011
0 Comments

Paris Contemporary Art 2014

26/11/2014

0 Comments

 
Paris is a major international city that is over 2000 years old.  It has seen more art movements than most of us can list and it continues to influence the art world today.  When you come to Paris to experience contemporary art, you will discover more than just French artists.  Just as at the ‘fin de siècle’ of the 19th century brought great artists from every corner of Europe and North America, Paris maintains the ability to attract top international artists who exhibit in their many prestigious established and cutting-edge venues alike.  At every major international art fair, such as those produced by Frieze or Art Basel, Parisian art dealers have a clear and strong presence.  Powerhouse dealers from other countries flock to establish a presence in Paris, drawing in big names like London’s Gagosian, NYC’s Marian Goodman and Salzburg’s Thaddaeus Ropac.  With three major international art fairs per year –  Art Paris, FIAC (Foire Internationale d'Art Contemporain), and Paris Photo,  with the latter two establishing annual venues in L.A., Paris is a major hub on the European and international art markets.
Picture
Anish Kapoor at FIAC 2012, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
This June I had the opportunity to visit Paris once again, only this time I brought a dozen art collectors from the Contemporary Art Society of Vancouver (CASV) with me.  As a Director of the CASV and an avid Francophile, I wanted to share my passion for the contemporary art scene of Paris with a Canadian audience.  This tour represents the last 6 months of my life: 5 months of preliminary planning, 15 exceptional hosts, and 5 days of fantastic French contemporary art experiences!

As we know, the traditional modes of presentation for contemporary art have evolved.  Although the model of the “white cube’ still has it’s place, particularly in commercial galleries, Paris persistently features innovative and decisively “unfinished” experimental venues for it’s presentations.  The Palais de Tokyo brings this hip new aesthetic into it’s 1936 re-purposed building format, perhaps drawing from a similar “unfinished” aesthetic that has been made popular in art works that reveal their own creative process.  On the other end of the spectrum Parisians also find contemporary art in places dedicated to history, such as the Chateau Versailles, now a public museum that serves as a reminder of the wealth, opulence and ultimately, the abuse of power of the last great French monarchs before the Revolution.  Through an annual program of contemporary art installations, Chateau Versailles has featured exhibitions by artists Jeff Koons, Bernar Venet, Takashi Murakami, Xavier Veilhan and others.  We were fortunate to meet and attend a private studio visit with Xavier Veilhan while in Paris as well as with Jean-Michel Othoniel, who is currently working on a permanent installation at Versailles.
Picture
Jean-Michel Othoniel shows Vancouver collectors his plans for the Versailles installation, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
One of the most obvious aspects of the contemporary art scene of Paris is it’s extraordinary funding.  While the French will quickly remind you of any recent cutbacks, they often don’t realize how good they really have it in comparison to other countries.  They are constantly immersed in an environment where art is everywhere to be discovered.  You don’t have to have money to enjoy art – it can be seen at above ground metro station entrances, in the metro itself, throughout the parks, installed in major department stores, and just about anywhere you look.  Also, most museums offer a monthly “free day”.  France is after all “the mother of the arts”.  It is no wonder that French citizens are more than willing to support cultural endeavors through public support as well.
Picture
CASV Director - Holly Marie Armishaw (centre left) with FRAC Champagne Director – Florence Derieux (centre right) at Domaine Pommery, Reims, France Photo by Murray Fraeme
One of the highlights of our tour was a day trip to nearby Reims to see the innovative installation of the FRAC (Fonds Régional d'Art Contemporain) Champagne-Ardenne collection.  The Director of the FRAC, Florence Derieux, has collaborated with Vranken Pommery, who has allowed her to create an extensive intervention on the estate integrating the collection into the vast network of underground Gallo-Roman chalk caves where the champagne is aged.  This exhibition celebrates the 30th anniversary of the FRAC Champagne-Ardenne.  The FRAC Director, with the cooperation of Madame Pommery, hosted the CASV for a very memorable private tour and champagne tasting. 

Aside from government support, there exist a number of foundations that also offer support for the arts; they are often created and funded by globally renowned French luxury designer brands, liquor distributors and other corporations.  In the five-day intensive tour that we had in Paris, we were only able to scratch the surface of their existence.  We were graciously invited by the Directors for private tours at both the Foundation Cartier pour l'Art Contemporain, which is currently celebrating their 30th Anniversary, and behind the scenes at L’Espace Culturel Louis Vuitton.  This fall will witness the opening of the Foundation Louis Vuitton in Paris’ Bois-de-Boulogne, built by world-renowned architect Frank Gehry and funded by the French luxury brand LVMH.

One of the most impressive aspects of French support for contemporary art is through their collaborations with fashion.  Artists like Jean Pierre Raynaud and Jean-Michel Othoniel, both of whose studios we had the opportunity for private visits at, have received commissions or done collaborations with world-renowned fashion designers.  The first time that I encountered the sculptural work of Othoniel was in the window of an Yves Saint Laurent boutique in SoHo, NYC, circa 2000.  Jean Pierre Raynaud’s most famous work, La Maison, has been the setting for important fashion photo shoots.  Even though La Maison has been destroyed, he recently collaborated with French fashion design duo Piece d’Anarchive in a large-scale collaborative installation at the Palais de Tokyo where he filled 64 stainless steel buckets with the demolished remains of La Maison.  And of course, Louis Vuitton has famously collaborated with contemporary artists like Takashi Murakami for a product line, and more recently, with Yayoi Kusama.  The fusion of art with design serves to make it a bit more fashionable, potentially bringing in a younger wave of art collectors.
Picture
“Container Zero” by Jean-Pierre Raynaud at the Centre Pompidou, 2012, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
So what about the work itself?  What defines French art today?  With such a great diversity of artists working in different directions, there is no easy answer..  However, I will say this – installation is king!  With sculpture a close second, the two are often inseparable.  Visual art is no longer the stand-alone snob of the arts; collaborations are prolific, merging indiscriminately with musicians, fashion designers, and just about any other creative genre.  Following a studio visit with French artist Xavier Veilhan, he invited us to attend a concert being held in the installation "On/Off" that he had created at the popular Galeries Lafayette department store in their dedicated exhibition space, Galeries des Galeries, re-creating the space using old make-up kiosks with the brand names removed.  When the space was "On" it was packed with performers and their audiences and at "Off" times, the space could be explored in more subdued, intimate manner.
Picture
Xavier Veilhan’s installation “On, Off” at Galeries Lafayette with performance by band Moodid, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
With such a great myriad of cultural diversity, is there anything missing?  As I neared completion of my itinerary for the contemporary art tour of Paris, I gradually became aware that there was a notable absence of women artists featured in my program.  After reaching out to dozens of private art foundations, top gallerists, collectors, and art patrons, none of them had offered me anything that featured women artists.  Adamant that this was not the image of Paris that I wanted to portray, I scoured the websites of my contacts again.  Shortly afterwards, I received word from the Director of L’Espace Culturel Louis Vuitton that we were invited to visit their space and that the new artist in residence, Andrea Bowers, a feminist artist from L.A., would be arriving just prior to our tour.  Unfortunately, as she had just begun her residency, there was not yet any of her works to be seen when we toured the space.
Picture
One of my favorite gallerists, Emmanuel Perrotin, was scheduled to have an exhibit up during our stay in Paris that peaked my interest.  To offer a bit of background, Emmanuel Perrotin has become somewhat of an art world celebrity in his own right.  It is he who launched the very successful career of Japanese artist Takashi Murakami.  Perrotin also represents a stable of other internationally acclaimed artists, such as Maurizio Cattelan, who covered the façade of the central pavilion of the 2011 Venice Biennale in taxidermied pigeons.  Both artists represent an aesthetic of playfulness that make it unsurprising that Perrotin once had a gallery in Miami, host city of the annual Art Basel Miami Beach fair that draws blue chip art collectors, celebrities and art world glitterati to a place where “fun” is the new chic.  It was in Miami that Perrotin met pop music star, Pharrell Williams, an avid art collector, and the guest curator of the current show “GIRL” in the Perrotin’s Paris, Salle de Bal location.

The title of the show “GIRL” gave me new hope in discovering new talents in contemporary French female artists.  Sidelining the feminist interpretation in my head over the derogatory nature of the term “girl” being used when referring to grown women, I scheduled a private tour of the exhibit for the CASV.  The exhibit contained token works by famed female artists Marina Abramovich, Tracey Emin, Sophie Calle, Yoko Ono and Cindy Sherman.  However, out of the 37 artists exhibited in the show, only 18 were women.  The others were men who paid homage to their vision of women, or evidently, homage to Pharrell Williams.  I counted 7 works created for or based on the curator, Pharrell Williams.  While I am of the belief that a curator should never steal the show from the artists they are exhibiting, Emmanuel Perrotin has been in this business a lot longer than I have.  He knows first and foremost that art is business, and secondly, that the cult of celebrity is big business.  Coming to Paris with a great respect for Perrotin and the lengths that he has gone to support his artists, I left with a somewhat jaded perspective.  But, at the end of the day, if his modus operandi gets more media attention for his artists, should it be criticized?  And, how can one begin to criticize a dealer who welcomes the critique of himself by the artists he shows.  (see bottom right) The Guerilla Girls message proves to be as relevant today as it was when I first learned of their work during art school back in the 90’s. 

Picture
Guerilla Girls Installation at Galerie Perrotin, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Picture
Guerilla Girls poster at Galerie Perrotin, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
As my contemporary art tour of Paris with the CASV concluded, I left somewhat disheartened.  The older I get the more I become aware of that as a women, I am not equal, and we still have a long ways to go.  Following Paris, my French vacation took me to the Cote d’Azure and Provence, where museums and exhibits dedicated to the “heroic” male artists who had once lived there, were prolific – Picasso, Matisse, Chagall, Miro (at the Foundation Maeght) Van Gogh, Cezanne, and in Monaco, Gilbert and George.  Reluctant to criticize France, I had to ask myself – are we in Canada any better?  After all, who comes to mind when we think of Vancouver's most internationally acclaimed artists?

As I unpacked my suitcase upon my arrival back in Vancouver, I took out a stack of catalogues that had been given to me along the way.  I sat down with a coffee to read the first one – a catalogue of the 2013 Prix Marcel Duchamp/Duchamp Prize nominees.  The Duchamp Prize is a great honour to receive in France, the equivalent to the Turner Prize in the U.K.  One of the most exceptional hosts that I’d had the honour of working on this tour with, Gilles Fuchs, is one of the founders of ADIAF, who created the Duchamp Prize.  As one of the initiators and key patrons of the Prize, Fuchs is also on the jury.  I knew the 2013 winner to be Latifa Echakch, but to my delight, she was one of 3 women who were nominated for the Prix Marcel Duchamp, out of 4 last year!  Gilles Fuchs had been one of our favourite hosts with his warm personality, exceptional generosity, many well-established connections and dedication to contemporary art.  So although women may not have equality in the arts yet, perhaps there is hope. 
PictureADIAF President Gilles Fuchs with CASV Director Holly Marie Armishaw, photo by Albarosa Simonetti

0 Comments

Hiroshi Sugimoto at the Palais de Tokyo

2/7/2014

0 Comments

 
Hiroshi Sugimoto is one of the world’s most renowned photographic artists.  He is masterful both in the technical precision of his works and in concept.  He is best known for his long-duration exposures, such as those that are created in grandiose theater settings, opening his shutter for the entire duration of a film, which results in a beautifully detailed setting with a pure ray of light emitting from the screen.  Using a similar technique, he has also created a series of seascapes; the duration of the exposure cancels out any and all details of the waves, photographically annihilating any potential life form from the image.  The result is a minimalist composition with a clean horizon line, separating ocean from sky.  It is with one of these seascapes that our journey into Sugimoto’s solo exhibition at the Palais de Tokyo begins. 
Picture
Hiroshi Sugimoto, “Seascape”, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw 2014
Upon entering the subterranean space of Paris’ iconic contemporary art institution, it is immediately evident that this is not a typical photography exhibit.  In fact, photographs play a minimal role in this wholly immersive environment.  We find ourselves taking on the role of archeologists in the post-apocalyptic realm that Hiroshi Sugimoto has created.  The exhibition area is lit only by the natural light emitting from the skylights.  On evenings when the gallery is open late, visitors are given flashlights with which to explore the exhibit, further engaging their senses and imagination in this mysterious realm, as it would be if one were to find themselves suddenly with no electricity available.  I hesitate to use the word “exhibit” for this immersive environment as it is so far from the traditional formal use of the word when used in reference to art.  However, many of its elements include artifacts from Sugimoto’s personal collection, indeed placed “on exhibit” for us to find in the wake of the apocalypse.  Sugimoto invites us to imagine ourselves in this situation and has left clues for us to discover to piece together the story of “what happened”.  Survival aids can be found around the space, including a bottle of preserved air.  Amidst the ruins we find hand-written letters left behind from various individuals who relayed their final thoughts on the day that the world ended. 
Picture
Installation by Hiroshi Sugimoto, Photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Picture
"Lightening Field" and Installation by Hiroshi Sugimoto, Photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
At the end of the world as we know it, chaos reigns supreme.  The natural world clearly has us at its mercy.  For a moment, Sugimoto returns to his role as photographer, with his “Lightening Field” photographs, exposed through electromagnetic waves one of them is aptly placed behind a figure of the God of Thunder, further alluding to the idea that the human race has been metaphorically and perhaps literally ‘struck down’.

Throughout the exhibition environment, many explanations can be found for the state in which we find ourselves: a meteor which has crashed through the skylight and continued it’s course blasting a hole in the gallery floor to reveal a hidden cavern; empty beehives; relics of war and most disturbingly, a "Japanese Hunting License" proclaiming open-season on the Japanese people.  Where did we go wrong?  Fossils of giant insects raise the question if they will once again rule the world when we are gone.  Most riveting though are the evidences of how the last survivors tried to cope.  Tiny vials containing supposed human DNA are hidden throughout the space, in hopes that the human race can be re-activated again in the future by any survivors.  The impacts at the end are substantial, sex plays a key role in our survival; hermaphrodite bodies can be found strapped down, with gas masks or other respiratory aids.
Picture
Installation by Hiroshi Sugimoto, Photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Others have accepted their tragic fates and have done the only thing they can think do – spend their last evening on earth drinking with friends.  In case we don’t get the reference, Sugimoto has provided a panorama of images depicting “The Last Supper” -  their photographic emulsions damaged by contact with liquid.  A long table can be found strewn with empty bottles.  At closer scrutiny we come across an important clue, a vintage date on a bottle of wine marked year “0028”.
Picture
Installation by Hiroshi Sugimoto, Photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Picture
Wine Bottle and Installation by Hiroshi Sugimoto, Photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
In a post-apocalyptic world all currency systems are affected and the art world is no exception.  Art no longer holds the values we have ascribed to it.  What was once considered a priceless pop art object now holds more value as a last meal.
Picture
Installation by Hiroshi Sugimoto, Photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
As we near the end of the exhibition we are left feeling lost, confused, alone and solemn.  We have been hit hard in the gut through the confrontation of our own demise as we think about returning to the surface and emerging out into the city again to face the daily media blasts of the most recent and recurrent threats to global security.

Hiroshi Sugimoto was born in Tokyo, Japan in 1948.  This fact becomes relevant when we consider that he was born just 3 years after the U.S. atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki.  Growing up in a post-nuclear society would certainly give one cause to consider the looming threat of human extinction. 

As we near the end of the exhibition we approach one last object, placed on a plinth in the centre of the final stretch.  The position in which it has been displayed indicates that this is a very important element.  It is a small sculpture of stacked crystal prisms.  As the clouds are clearing overhead and the sun begins to emerge through the skylights, a beam of light hits the prism releasing a small rainbow of colour, a symbol of hope.  (Not only is light necessary for sustaining life, but is it also an essential element in the photographic process.)  As we view the mid-sphere the centre splits into two visual fields, separated by a clear horizon line; no details, just earth and sky.  All details have been obliterated, as they might be in the event of a nuclear disaster, just as they were in the first piece in the exhibit.  In this we find a new beginning.  As we follow the final corridor of the space, we find ourselves back at the beginning of the exhibit, where we first saw Sugimoto’s “Seascape” and the journey begins again.

Although this exhibition was something of a surprise, Hiroshi Sugimoto has kept true to his most definitive themes: an encapsulation of time and the cyclical nature of death and re-birth.  This impressive exhibition comes full circle, though an experience that has the familiarity of a great film or film.  We leave our journey in awe of its profundity.
Picture
Prism and Installation by Hiroshi Sugimoto, Photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Hiroshi Sugimoto’s exhibit “Aujourd’hui, le monde est mort [Lost Human Genetic Archive]” ran until September 7th, 2014 at the Palais de Tokyo in Paris.
0 Comments

Gilles Fuchs - Private Collection Visit

30/6/2014

0 Comments

 
The CASV is honored to have been taken under the wing of esteemed art collector, Gilles Fuchs.  As President of ADIAF (The Association for the International Diffusion of French Art), Mr. Fuchs has generously extended his support for contemporary artists, and French artists in particular, by founding the acclaimed Prix Marcel Duchamp, France’s answer to the U.K.’s Turner Prize.  Each year four nominees compete for the Prize, showing together at FIAC in front of an international audience, culminating with a single winner being chosen from a jury of notable figures in the art world, including Fuchs himself.  The winner goes on to a solo exhibit by a major French art institution, the Centre Pompidou and receives a sizable financial endowment.
Picture
Sculpture by Jean Michel Othoniel in foreground, Work by Gilbert and George in background Photo by Holly Marie Armishaw, 2014
Picture
Rebecca Horn, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw, 2014

True to his passion of contemporary art, the private residence of Gilles Fuchs, which we were fortunate to be invited to visit, demonstrates his strong commitment.  His collection is vast and diverse, containing works not just of French artists, but many top international artists.  Immediately recognizable is a large work by British artists, Gilbert and George.  In the den rests a painting by tragic American artist Jean-Michel Basquiat, on the mantle a set of ceramic “animals” by Picasso, a small sculpture by Japanese pop artist Takashi Murakami and another by Chinese artist Chen Zhen, who was then presently showing at Galerie Emmanuel Perrotin in Paris.

Lesser known in Canada, is a work by German artist Rebecca Horn.  Horns’ work combines mechanical elements with that of living creatures and often body prosthesis, creating unique hybrid forms.  You may have seen her work without even realizing it, as shock-rocker Marilyn Manson has used two of her “wearable sculptures” in his music 1998 video “Dope Show”.  Clearly Manson is impressed by her work too, as the title of his best-selling album “Mechanical Animals” seems aptly reminiscent of Rebecca Horn’s work.
In the main room is a piece by critically acclaimed French artist Christian Boltanksi, who represented France in the 2011 Venice Biennale. What first appears to be a coffee table, at closer inspection is a vitrine of curious archived objects and mementos, one of his “Vitrine of Reference” works.  As is typical of Boltanski’s unique style, an air of tragedy is evoked in this work.  His photo-installations often recall the horrific tragedy of the Holocaust, a personal reminder of his Jewish father and a global reminder of the scars incurred by many countries.  Christian Boltanski’s poignant voice still resounds strongly today as one of France’s best artists.
Picture
Detail of Christian Boltanski’s “Vitrine of Reference” Photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Picture
Detail of Christian Boltanski’s “Vitrine of Reference” Photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
A collector’s true commitment to their passion for art is often seen in a site-specific installation in one’s home; in this case, a dining room designed by French conceptual artist Daniel Buren.  Integrating his bold black and white lines, Buren’s work pairs perfectly with the signature grids of his French contemporary, Jean Pierre Reynaud.  Once a part of “La Maison” in la Celle Saint Cloud, a project in the mid-70’d where Reynaud covered an entire house in his signature black and white tiles and later destroyed it because it was “too beautiful”, some of the remnants are now in the private collection of Mr. Fuchs.  Beautifully curated, Fuchs dining room seamlessly integrates the works of Buren and Reynaud while complimented by the more obvious, yet also gridded work of Gilbert and George’s “Crazed Growth”. 
Picture
CASV Members with Gilles Fuchs, Daniel Buren Installation with Stained Glass by JP Raynaud, photo by Holly Marie Armishaw
Picture
ADIAF President Gilles Fuchs and CASV Director Holly Marie Armishaw, Photo by Albarosa Simonetti
0 Comments

    Holly Marie Armishaw

    Based in Vancouver, Canada, Holly Marie Armishaw is a contemporary artist, art writer, francophile, and world traveler.  Through rigorous exploration of inspiration from international  sources of art and culture, she infuses her insights  with a critical eye as she discusses global trends.  Both her art and writing are informed by attending a continuous array of art exhibitions, lectures, fairs and biennales, both at home and abroad.

    Articles

    All
    10 Days Of Contemporary Art In Paris - Summer 2016
    Art Basel Miami Beach
    French Collector - ADIAF
    Hiroshi Sugimoto - Palais De Tokyo (Paris)
    On Defining Post-Parisian Depression
    Paris Contemporary Art
    The Invaluable Message Of "I Am Malala"
    The Timely Art Of Shirin Neshat
    What Is Bastille Day And Why Is It Relevant To The Western World?
    What Is Painting? Perspectives From Art Basel 2016

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
  • Home
  • Portfolio
  • Anthology
  • Artist Talks
    • Panel Discussion
    • Radio Interview
    • Artist's Talk
  • Artist Statement
  • Curriculm Vitae
  • Contact
  • Essays
  • Blog: Contemporary Art, History and Culture