Title: “Over Our Dead Bodies”, Size 40" x 60" (approx)
Stained glass
So, this is an image of all the glass parts but its not actually assembled yet as I need a rebar frame made before it gets soldered together. But this is what it will look like.
I started working on this piece several years ago (that is true for all of them--there's a long lage between inception, conception and ejection) I wanted to work with the "tree of life" idea. Who doesn’t enjoy a good “tree of life”
image? Apparently close to everyone!! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tree_of_life
In the past few years, my work has been drifting inevitably
towards something. I am less interested
in the female character which I am known for and the “decorative motifs” which
occupied the background are coming into the foreground. Now I feel I could have predicted this as for
years the background was equally important to me as the foreground and as time
goes on, its pressing the human figure out entirely.
Why has this shift in my work happened? Does anyone care? Well, I am only speculating here but 1.
Change is inevitable in any artists oeuvre.
Narrative, figurative, realist artists might get less so and vice versa. 2. I
am less interested in talking about me personally. Those female characters were never ME, but
boy, did I identify with them! Now, I am
older, and I have had time to grow weary of my own drama.
So, for the past few years, I have become increasingly
interested in pushing the flora and fauna forward. I made a black and white rough draft of the
“tree of life” idea a while back, alongside pieces such as “Wild Life”, “Sky
Life”, “Cross Pollination” (and these pieces grew out of “Anchoress” and
others). A “tree of life” seemed a
logical extension of the idea and something worth exploring.
But what of the preponderance of excellent cultural
examples? What was I going to bring to
the conversation? Ugh, I hate artistic
accountability!
Ever since the election in 2016, many artists shifted their
focus to a more activist stance, for obvious and righteous reasons. Although I would never claim to be a
political artist, my work began to subtly address environmental issues. “Beached Whale”, “Immigration Policy”,
“Murdered Animal”, “Cross Pollination” for example. As I worked on the tree of life image, it
rapidly became about climate change.
I began calling the piece “Over Our Dead Bodies”. That was intended to suggest what life on
this planet will be like after humans die off.
Even though I feel a certain ambivalence towards my species, I have
nightmares about the end of human-kind.
The upside is that our catastrophic meddling with the ecosystem will
stop. One way to see “Over Our Dead
Bodies” is of a spectacularly vivid, lush resurgence of animal and plant life.
Then, along came the pandemic to provide the perfect frame
of made in which to contemplate these ideas whilst the piece was actually being
created. Taking long walks around the city I could see how fast nature begins
to reassert itself! It was pretty
amazing and this in only a few weeks! I
saw a Downy Woodpecker! An
Ovenbird! Kestrels! A Common
Yellowthroat (not common in the city!)
There was noticeably less bus exhaust, clear azure skies, etc. Will we take this lesson home after the
pandemic? I sincerely doubt it. But the
respite was profound. And it informed my
piece.
I decided any tree of life worth its salt would most
assuredly reflect its origins in the soil.
Although it’s pretty hard to discern, the underworld section has a
“branch” pattern which is similar to the tree above.
A
tree of LIFE must be predicated on the entire life cycle, not just the living
part.
4 comments:
Remarkable work Judith. I’m guessing that with such a long gestation period you have more than one piece on the go at any one time. Do you find thoughts crossing across pieces and working their way into other panels you have on the go?
Should I keep quiet or exhibit my pitiful command of the English language? Your words and art always impress and inspire me, you are an example of an artist and I reserve that title for a very few people. Thank you Judith I am fortunate to be sharing this time-space with you. David Hopper
the work is beautiful, no question. you should be very proud. i assume you have met stuart pivar...weird to see him and his school mixed up with the epstein scandal, tho not surprising.
Hi Weinstein on the Beach--
I did not know who Stuart Pivar was--I have never even heard of him. But I goggled him. I did not know that school was involved--how awful! (I have not taught there in a long time, but my experiences there were wonderful and I have fond memories.
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