Friday is a rich day this week. First I caught up with Textiles and Tea, with Veronica Perez, which I missed on Tuesday, what with one thing and another.
She's a sculptor working in the medium of braided hair, nowadays plant based, from abaca fiber, eco-friendly. She's of the Puerto Rican diaspora, interested in the significance of hair in marginalized communities including her own LatinX (I'm using her term here).
Her pieces are huge, dealing with big ideas of time, oppression, at the same time of comfort and acceptance.
In her large wall pieces she incorporates audio of the teams helping braid the hair used in the piece. They talk about their own experience of acceptance and rejection based on hair type and styles, and the viewer has to get close to the piece to experience the sound. It's personal and inclusive.
She's been a social worker too and all her experience there folds into how she works with the braiding workshop people and respects their stories. They're compensated for their time, though some decline payment.
Anyway here's a few of these amazing works
She's fine with months of work lasting so briefly, with only a video to see now. It's a wonderful piece, saying so much about the sugar trade and what it did, and does, to people. And how their stories live on when their bodies are gone.
Hair is a big thought, so much emotion and judgment around it, particularly around the dark hair of indigenous and Black and Brown people.
I may write more about this, but today's so full already.
Then, the cleaners being here this morning, great, a clean house to come home to, particularly after Bionic Helen, I am officially in the library where there's this
There's a section for younger students, too, like these terrific entries, above.
Happy day everyone. Home to crunchy tofu sticks and a roughy for lunch. Coda to the tofu story: I'm home and reheated tofu sticks by toasting them, worked fine, lovely and crunchy.
Today's sand in the gears: I entered a comment at Homeland Security docket objecting to the proposed Alien Registration regulation, clearly designed to trap.
Either the immigrant registers, putting their identity there, high risk to them and family, or they don't, now risking additional charges in support of deportation if they're picked up.
This is the last day to comment. DHS docket USCIS-2025-0004. Include 1615 NEW in the body of the comment or it won't be valid.
I hope your day's as rich as mine.
The students’ art exhibit is a great idea for the library. It looks wonderful!
ReplyDeleteIt's a burst of color and energy, mounted salon style, all the space filled.
DeleteThe artist that uses hair - so interesting! What a wonderful exhibit at your library. Very talented young people!
ReplyDeleteNo lack of talent in the world. It's all about access. And these lucky students have it.
DeleteI am wondering what Ms. Perez's initial inspiration was. I know that back in Victorian times, the hair of deceased loved ones was sometimes used in making mourning jewelry but I don't know of any other examples in different cultures. Not that I can think of, anyway. Interesting.
ReplyDeleteGlen just showed me today a picture he'd taken of a little boy holding his painting. Long story there but the child was so proud of it! He just had to share. Oh, if only we never lost that joy and pride in creating art.
She's the daughter of a Puerto Rican man who had a huge afro. He was proud of it but when he came to mainland USA and joined the military, it was cut to required length. He regretted the loss for the rest of his life and she came to understand its cultural significance to him and by extension his people.
DeleteArtists don't lose that joy and pride! We're very privileged.
Wow! Now that is an amazing story. Thank you.
DeleteI like the sugar arms. Not so sure about the hair pieces. Maybe they work better in real life.
ReplyDeleteThey're powerful and disturbing, true. I'd like to see them in rl life, too.
DeleteOur library does offer up the art from the local school too. I love walking through and looking at what young artists create.
ReplyDeleteThe sugar arms and hair pieces certainly are something quite different. I'm not sure if they are creepy or not. However, art is meant to cause a reaction from the viewer of the art.
Young people's art can be so energetic and exciting, lovely to see a whole gallery of it at once.
DeleteYes, art isn't about liking or not liking, it's about impact really.
I always enjoy art exhibitions featuring the work of kids in school.
ReplyDeleteThey're so direct, no worries!
DeleteUsing the hair is really unique and so strangely personal. A bit unsettling, but makes the audience ponder.
ReplyDeleteI enjoyed seeing all the artwork at the library. Enlarged the pictures to get a better look. :)
She's really a social justice artist all the meanings of hair and acceptance. I agree, unsettling. Art is!
DeleteChildren's art is so unpretentious.
ReplyDeleteThe Alien Registration proposal sounds vicious. So many must feel so threatened.
And they've returned to calling non citizens aliens, as when I long ago was one.
DeleteUsing hair and sugar in art is certainly an interesting concept. Not sure if I'd like it if I were to see it up close.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed seeing the library display of art. Kids have no conception of what's right or wrong when it comes to artistic expression and their creations are often quite wonderful. Good for your library for allowing them an opportunity to shine.
The youth art is a countywide annual event. It's in libraries, community centers, and other spaces. Our local gallery is one of the best locations, very visible to the community. It's such a burst of energy and color.
DeleteFascinating work by Veronica Pereze -- the sugar arms are especially intriguing -- and I love the student art too! It's great the library makes itself available for such displays.
ReplyDeleteThe gallery is there as a dedicated designed space thanks to my years of effort. It's wonderful to see all kinds of art displayed there.
Delete