Wednesday, January 6, 2010

la cultura americana

american culture 201: visual and material culture


“i am totally sexually submissive.”
“i, after some resistance, will be seduced.”



This piece is about the objectification and sexual exploitation of women in print media as reflective of the sexual evolution of women over time. I chose to create two portraits that appropriate both the style of contemporary American conceptualist artist, Barbara Kruger, and the notions behind the writing of Tamara Garb’s, “The Forbidden Gaze: Women Artists and the Male Nude in Late Nineteenth Century France.” The women in my work are positioned as the subject and we, as the male viewer, project all of our sexual thoughts and desires onto them.
In “The Forbidden Gaze: Women Artists and the Male Nude in Late Nineteenth Century France,” Garb uses the complex character of Isabelle as an embodiment of the disgust she has for the double standard set between women and men. In the 19th century, women artists were not permitted to observe men naked, unlike men who had been examining and depicting women nude since the beginning of time. This so-called ‘forbidden gaze’ was seen as dangerous and threatening akin to the Medusa: just one look could blind and kill you. The distinction between my two images illustrates this division between the purity of men and the purity of women. The images I used signify women’s sexual progression as the mentality and innocence of women has changed; while women’s rights have increased over many centuries, the ability to see men unclothed has become more and more socially acceptable.
Just like Barbara Kruger, I took my images from mainstream magazines that sell the exact ideas I am challenging. The female in the left image is posed in utter submission to the viewer as she opens her blouse willingly and beckons men with her eyes, letting herself go without any resistance. In contrast, the female on the right stares directly and powerfully at the viewer, showing she has come into her own. Yet, she is not turning away from the viewer, indicating she’s still interested. In her work, Kruger combines powerful image and text using black and white photographs with overlaid captions that are declarative and make use of common pronouns like, ‘you,’ ‘I,’ ‘we,’ and, ‘they,’ in order to engage the viewer. Typically, her text uses the colors red and white, which I also employed. Additionally, I created captions that are frank and sarcastic, poking fun at the hidden meanings in advertisements that depict women. Moreover, I borrowed a quote from Garb’s text in the second image, “Isabelle, after some resistance, will be seduced.” Through a combination of the writing of Tamara Garb and the style of Barbara Kruger, I have attempted to show that although female sexuality used to be more hidden, it has now become more public.


the greatest show on earth



This piece is about the inhumane and immoral portrayal of Native Americans in their dioramas at the Museum of Natural History. I chose to create an imitation of a traditional American circus poster but from the perspective of Native Americans putting White American businessmen on exhibit. I incorporated notions and text from Patricia Davison’s article, “Museums and the Reshaping of Memory,” and Melani McAllister’s article, “Epic Encounters: Culture, Media, and U.S. Interests in the Middle East 1945-2000.” The White American viewer experiences the ad in the same way that Native Americans experience the Native American Dioramas in Transition; in both circumstances the respective culture is “stereotyped and oversimplified” discriminatorily (Brown).
I used the absurdity of the circus, as an extreme example of an exhibition of others, to ridicule the unjust portrayal of these indigenous people at the Natural History Museum. In this design, I studied several conventional American circus advertisements and created a fanatical appropriation of the language they use. Additionally, I searched for a font that looked as if it was created by a primitive handmade writing tool. I used an animal skin-parchment-like background and recreated Native American patterns and symbols to make it look more authentic. Moreover, I used a natural color palette that appears as if it were crafted with dyes from plants. These artistic aspects combined make the composition seem as if it were a realistic Native American document.
In “Museums and the Reshaping of Memory,” Davison discusses museums as a mirror of power. Thus, the curators, or those in power, have complete control over the exhibit, which in turn affects the way the viewer experiences the display. In the instance of Native American Dioramas in Transition, the viewer recognizes the Native Americans according to the way the curator, Robert Butsch, chose to depict them, which was according to his own bias. Consequently, these natives are understood as simple creatures, extinct like the dinosaurs that are also on display in the museum. In terms of my poster, the viewer acknowledges the subjected culture, White American businessmen, as “cold & calculating,” greedy entrepreneurs as if the exhibit was created by Native Americans angered by the unfair treatment they typically receive from White Americans.
According to McAllister in “Epic Encounters: Culture, Media, and U.S. Interests in the Middle East 1945-2000,” the government dictated how the exhibition of King Tut was represented and perceived; “In fact, the political and cultural investments in the Tut tour made it far more than a simple bicentennial ‘gift’” (McAllister 127). While in Native American Dioramas in Transition, the White Americans are considered the majority in power and the Native Americans are considered the powerless minority, the roles are reversed in my poster. The Native Americans, more specifically, The Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa & Chippewa Indians, have become the governing majority in authority, exploiting the dehumanized, helpless, White American businessman as a stereotyped and oversimplified representative of the larger culture. Just as the interest in the King Tut exhibit thrived because of, “…a rising media fascination with Middle East terrorism, and the 1973 Arab-Israeli war…” (McAllister 126), this exhibit prospers due to the Native American enthrallment in the White American Colonizers that took over Native American land and treated them intolerably.
Accordingly, the problem of exhibition is that it is impossible for the creator of an exhibition to construct a public display free from his or her judgment. Therefore, the viewer experiences an exhibition, whether it is an exhibit at a natural history museum, a display at an art museum, or even a circus, in terms of the exhibition designer’s bias. Indeed, the viewer experiences this piece according to my predisposition.

my obsession: the heidelberg project

if you don't know what the heidelberg project is, then you don't know me at all. it is one of my favorite places in the world, located in detroit, about a 45 minute drive from ann arbor.









here's some background info before i continue...
(this is an excerpt from a paper i wrote for my american culture class about community) -

"Another type of community arose in the inner city of Detroit in the 1980s. Tyree Guyton, the African American artist behind the Heidelberg Project, was raised on Heidelberg Street and, at the age of twelve, experienced the wretched result of the Detroit race riots in 1967; poor housing for blacks had led to a massive uprising. What started as a nightly bar raid became a five day-long anarchism that included pillages and fires, in addition to a magnitude of arrests and killings of mainly black people (“Riots in Detroit”). Guyton’s neighborhood was just one black community devastated by these racially based rebellions.
Ultimately, some twenty-one years later, Tyree Guyton took action and designed a creative response to the unending decay and affliction in the area in which he grew up. He started recovering his community with the help of his family and the neighborhood children, thus bringing the people of the broken community together. Collectively, they explored the streets and gathered everyday, discarded objects and junk that Tyree reused as decoration for the houses, yards, and sidewalks of the two-block area. What once were drug-infested, decrepit, and vacant houses, transformed into renovated, visually interesting works of art. Ultimately, the colorful and intriguing neighborhood garnered enough attention to drive the drug dealers out of the region as thousands of people started to visit the recognized site. Today, the Heidelberg Project remains a continually developing work that has revolutionized a rigid inner city community where people once were anxious to walk, even in the daytime, into one which neighbors take pride in and where visitors are many and welcome. This ‘Funky Artistic Cultural Village’ continues to symbolize how many areas in Detroit have been abandoned and the need to save these forgotten neighborhoods (“History”)."


i first went to the heidelberg project with one of my classes sophomore year and i immediately fell in love with it. i love collaged work and this place is like a LIVING collage. people still live in these houses covered in rainbow polka dots and numbers, it is actually incredible (see my pictures). over the michigan-wisconsin game weekend (when NO one was in ann arbor) sam, mandy, jess, and i decided to make a trip to the zoo and the heidelberg project. this was right after i handed in my paper about it. once we got there, parked, and began walking down the street, i immediately recognized a familiar man getting out of his truck. right away i knew it was the artist, tyree guyton, and internally freaked out. he smiled at us but i was too nervous to say anything to him until one of my friends yelled out, "she just did a project on the heidelberg project, she's an art student!" we walked over to him and he said, "you're an art student? prove it." he went and got me a bucket of blue paint and paint brush and told me to paint a polka dot on the street. next, he asked me to draw a picture of a house, with my polka dot on it, and write what i was thinking about when i painted the dot in his sketchbook. the sketchbook was filled with entries from people from all over the world. earlier in the day, some football coach had painted a purple polka dot on the side of a house. the shape of his dot looked just like a football which was coincidental, and quite funny.

professor trumpey's sustainable house

for a volunteer project for my environmental studies class, a few friends and i helped my professor who is building his own sustainable home out of adobe clay and straw.













here's some background info...
(this is an excerpt from our group presentation) -

"For our project, we volunteered our services in the building of Professor Joseph Trumpey’s environmentally friendly house in Grass Lake, Michigan. He is dedicated to designing and building a solar heated, water cooled straw-baled house that utilizes innovative architectural design, environmental stewardship, and ecological sustainability. He is erecting and insulating his house completely from bales of straw. The house is sustained by wind and solar energy with resources to stow rainwater and produce from crops grown on his 40-acre farmstead. When it is completed, it will exist as one of the only straw-bale houses in Michigan and among the increasing number of environmentally sustainable dwellings in the nation. The Trumpey family has been farming for nearly fifteen years, raising goats, chickens, cattle, and sheep. Moreover, they have a distinct interest in understanding food systems and where their food comes from. Their choice to grow as much of their own food as possible has ultimately led them live according to principles of ecological sustainability."

summer 2009: props master for seussical the musical @ chatham community players

egg/tree horton sits on - constructed out of cardboard, hemp, and styrofoam


fish puppet made out of a paper lantern & miscellaneous paper/plastic art supplies


flower made out of a loofa and a tree branch wrapped in colored tape

some graphic design for sigma delta tau

PR shirt for recruitment 2009 - made with alana nedelman


philanthropy shirt sold to chapters of SDT across the country, proceeds going to prevent child abuse america


more art...

onion constructed out of metal wire and masking tape


asparagus constructed out of a wax candle


painting project with dementia patients for an art & healthcare class





transgendered barbie


listen up

(this is meant to be in the form of a website - clicking the underlined words would lead you to the next page)