controversy - Quilters Club of America
Transcription
controversy - Quilters Club of America
controversy I have yet to read an article in any quilting magazine that addresses the controversial issue of art quilt content and how far is “too far” in the genre. But Quilter’s Home will! Heck, I had my hand slapped for planning to have two shirtless musclemen in black slacks walk my quilts around my mega-sold-out lecture at a Des Moines event because showing “flesh” was considered “over the top!” The truth is that controversial quilt themes have been causing a firestorm in quilt shows across the nation and in untold numbers of Internet quilting chat rooms. The angst is further fueled by frustrated quilt artists, who cry out that their “art” and “free speech” are being blocked by what they view as conservative quilt guild boards and venue sponsors who appear all too happy to become the morality police, the ultimate standard bearer in all things patchwork. If you can believe it, even I was turned off by the overt impropriety of some of the quilt images sent to my office. But who am I to judge? Luckily for Kitty Wells, Nikki Giovanni, Doris Day, Isadora Duncan, Lillian Hellman, Daria Fand, Carol Rama, Sylvia Plath, Maqbool Fida Husain, Harper Lee and a gazillion other banned entertainers, activists, writers, and artists, they were not quilters. xoxom COLOR BALANCE. Helping Hand by Mary Beth Bellah features penis designed fabric that resulted in this quilt being banned from a solo exhibit of her work. Shocking quilts How far is too far? By Jake Finch 24 Quilter’s Home March 2009 The Jesus Get Your Gun quilt by Shawn Quinlan was met with shock and gasps from Pittsburgh quilt show attendees where it was exhibited. S ex can sell anything, honey! (I mean, have you seen a Bratz doll lately?) Even with quilts, a smatter of shock can spice up a fiber art statement or wake up a quilt show exhibit. “T” and “A” aren’t just describing patchwork arrangements, that’s for sure. Susan Sanborn North is one quilter who knows all about shock value. The Troy, Mich., art quilter regularly exhibits her erotic-themed quilts at art galleries, yet — perish the thought! — she would never let them hang in a national quilt show because she knows most folks would consider her work X-rated. But when her online community, QuiltArt, debated about how a slew of cornflower quilts really did nothing but hang there and look pretty, Susan issued a challenge that took thought-provoking quilts in a, well, different direction. The result was the Yoni Challenge. (www.quiltart.com/ challenges/yoni/index.html) Yoni is the Sanskrit word that, loosely translated, refers to a woman’s genitalia. Quilts for the challenge had to depict or represent yoni, be pro-feminist and positive in nature. Thirty quilts and one quilted box (called the Hot Box, and we’re not kidding) were turned in, including quilts made by men and women, and representing graphic and abstract images of vaginas, vulvas and other parts of female anatomy (finally, a use for Angelina fiber!). Quilter’s Home March 2009 25 A provocative political and social statement is highlighted in the Southern Heritage/ Southern Shame quilt by Mississippi quilt artist, Gwendolyn Magee. “I remember thinking QuiltArt never does this,” Susan says. “That was the year (2006) when everyone was making a cornflower quilt. I thought, ‘Those are so banal. They’re pretty, but there’s no meaning to it at all.’ Many of the Yoni quilts had deep meaning for the quiltmaker.” For obvious reasons, and despite the popular and critical success of plays such as The Vagina Monologues, the Yoni quilts were never exhibited at any quilt show — major or minor — but instead were “exhibited” online. The in-your-face nature of the quilts, (some were too graphic even for Mark to dare publish!) would definitely curl a few toes at your standard venue. Of course, many quilts displayed at local and national shows do intentionally poke a stick at the sensibilities of some viewers. Quilts don’t have to live on a bed, you know, so a growing number of fiber artists are using their textile-tweaking skills to make statements. What’s said ain’t always pretty. Some quilts are blatantly sexual. Others include provocative political and religious statements and outright violent depictions. Any thought or emotion that can be slapped into paint or scribbled in text can certainly be worked into cloth. It’s all about the maker, baby! Shawn Quinlan is one such master at making strong statements in fiber. The Pittsburgh, Pa., quilter is also a television news cameraman, and 26 Quilter’s Home March 2009 he uses quilting as therapy for dealing with the troubling images he films each day. “I’m always editing something that gets my goat and I go home and vent my frustration. I don’t set out to be shocking,” he says. His out-there quilts are often serious criticisms against a hypocritical society, but he says he does try to stitch in some humor, too. In the “Secret Gay Quilt” (see Shawn’s Web site at www.shawnquinlan.com/GAYQUILT.html), a large penis plays the leading role in a collage quilt whose images make fun of gay stereotypes. In Jesus Get Your Gun,” Shawn responded to a National Rifle Association convention he filmed, where someone was holding up a cardboard sign saying, “Jesus for Guns.” That image struck him as comical. So he found one fabric with an image of Jesus and another fabric with an image of John Wayne, swapped heads and ended up with a True Grit cowboy version of Jesus (halo, too) holding a rifle. The resulting quilt was shown at a local show, to great gasps from some show-goers. Another quilt that’s gotten Shawn some attention is, The Quilt That Won’t Comfort. Created in the aftermath of the 9-11 terrorist attack, the quilt shows Jesus and his apostles at the Last Supper, surrounded by images of bomber jets, anthrax references, skulls, heroin poppies and anything else Shawn felt he was over-absorbing from the news in the months following the attacks. “Being at work that day — and months and months after it — and how it was in the news all of the time (was too much.) I just stuck in everything that was happening. That was definitely getting out nervous anxiety. That mostly is what my quilting is, getting out the anxiety.” Shawn’s quilts usually are accepted at quilt shows, a fact that always pleasantly surprises him. Not every show likes to walk the razor’s edge, though. Quilt artist Mary Beth Bellah of Charlottesville, Va., had an interesting rejection for one of her quilts, which often hang in galleries and special exhibits. She has a fascination with hands and communication. “Most of my work is conversation. It’s interactive with the individual. I really want to say something,” she says. Well, Mary Beth was given a fat quarter of blue fabric printed with little bitty line drawings of penises and sperm. It was fairly subtle and she decided to use the fabric in one of her dimensional quilts featuring hands. She called the quilt (ahem), Helping Hand, and says that she was inspired by the combination of the fabric and the deluge of Viagra ads she was seeing at the time. When Helping Hand was included in a solo exhibit of her work at a Charlottesville hospital, Mary Beth says she laughed when she was told the quilt was too risqué for public viewing. “It seemed to me that a hospital was the perfect environment for this work!” she says. “It really should eventually belong in some doctor’s office where their treatment specialty is erectile dysfunction issues.” The story doesn’t end here, folks. A few days after the show, the curator called Mary Beth and told her the censored quilt — which had been stored in his office closet — had had numerous private viewings when word got out. A steady parade of people apparently made excuses to visit his office just to see the banned quilt. “I am betting more attention was paid this quilt, stuffed in a closet, than to all my other ones on display,” she says. How far is too far (or too boring) when it comes to shocking quilts? I mean, a bare tushy or a bleeding body start looking pretty tame when you see ‘em all over the place. Stevii Graves, an author and juror for international quilt shows, says in general that large venues are open to almost all quilts, as long as they have a little class. “It’s got to have some taste to it. Political quilts are fine, but you don’t want to see a sitting president being assassinated. It depends on how graphic the depiction is,” she says. Still, Stevii says, most show organizers don’t want to discourage people from coming to their shows. “Their livelihood depends on the number of people coming through the door,” she says. Martha Sielman, executive director of the Studio Art Quilt Associates, an organization supporting art quilters, says sometimes the quilts she thinks might be censored are not, and other times quilts she doesn’t think of as over-the-top cause a kerfuffle. “When does it become erotic? I don’t know the answer to that,” she says. Charlotte Warr Anderson, whose work has graced quilt shows for years, also serves as president of the International Quilt Association. The IQA manages the judged quilt show held at the Houston International Quilt Festival every year. Charlotte says IQA jurors are sensitive to a quilt’s content, but their general attitude is to avoid censorship. The issue came up a few years ago when a quilt that the IQA board thought was in poor taste was submitted for the Houston show. “We all decided we didn’t want to be involved in censorship. So we decided to send it to the jury and the jury didn’t select it. I don’t think it was content. It was more a quality issue. But it just was not an attractive quilt at all. I feel like you can deal with tough subject matter in a tasteful way,” Charlotte says. Determining what makes a quilt vulgar or offensive can be difficult even for the quilt maker. Two years ago at Houston, Randall Cook was surprised when his quilt, I Remain was accepted. The 55-inchby-81-inch depiction of the rippling backside view of a naked man caused quite a stir. “I had never seen anything like that get in before,” Randall says. “I was very concerned that it wouldn’t even be accepted. I submitted it anyway. It was a graphic piece, but it wasn’t showing anything obscene.” Randall loved eavesdropping on visitors’ comments about his quilt. “There were a lot of comments like, ‘I’ve never seen anything like this here before.’ I think there were probably more interesting comments when I was there. It prompted people to stay and ask questions … Sometimes people would round the corner and say, ‘Oh there it is. The red naked butt.’” This year, Randall submitted two quilts also depicting nude men. Reflection and Escape were received by viewers with a little less surprise, he thinks. Sometimes a quilt’s shock value doesn’t come from titillating images, but from a viewer’s unexpected or emotional response to the quilt’s subject. Most people might be able to view the work with nary a pang, but someone connects with something in the image and is put off or disturbed. Quilt book author Sue Astroth remembers walking through an exhibit of Alzheimer’s quilts at a major show and having trouble absorbing the images presented. top Randall Cook’s sexually charged I Remain quilt, hung in the International Quilt Festival show in Houston in 2007 much to his surprise and the shock of many attendees. “I was very concerned that it wouldn’t even be accepted,” he says. bottom Gayle McKay’s Uncertainty quilt, represents the doubt that intrudes on her in her day to day life. She writes,“Uncertainty makes me want to crawl in a hole. Crawl back to my Mother’s arms.Crawl back inside her Yoni. Mother’s love is the one constant in life.…My Mother is gone. Uncertainty is the one constant in life.” Quilter’s Home March 2009 27 God of Our Silent Tears 1 quilt by Mississippi quilt artist, Gwendolyn Magee (www.gwenmagee.com), may make some viewers uncomfortable, but “is designed as a forum for dialogue and communication.” “The people pouring their souls out to you — sometimes it’s too much! Quilts can move you. While I know it was all done out of love, it was still more than I could continue to walk through and watch, because no matter what, I could relate it to some personal situation. It didn’t take me to a good next place. It left me feeling uncomfortable and itching,” she says. A little itch can be a good thing, though. Gayle McKay, one of the participants in the Yoni Challenge, says dealing with a controversial theme really pushed her artistically. “I’m pretty conservative and I didn’t want it to be in-your-face in any vulgar way, or my perception of vulgar,” says the Sandy Lake, Pa., resident. Spurred by the death of her mother that year, Gayle created an image of a child being born, which she named Uncertainty. The graphic image is sweet and interesting, not crude. “My intent as an artist is never to make you walk away. My intent is more to make you think and suck you in,” she says. The debate over “how far is too far” in quilting may have no conclusion. I mean, defining “shocking” is a little like defining “red.” There are just so many shades! You have to pick the one that works for you. Yet as the rapidly growing quilt artist community continues to pump out amazing, cutting-edge sexual, political, religious and social commentary in fabric, hopefully we can look forward to quilt shows where a gaggle of “I-know-what’s-best-zillas” won’t be making that decision for you or narcissistically believing what they allow you to see is aQHpersonal reflection on them. QH 28 Quilter’s Home March 2009 The 2004 banning of The L Word quilt by Diane Johns from the DeKalb (IL) County Quilters Guild show, received widespread local and national attention. Banned for its use of the Sapphic empowering words ’lesbian,’ ‘diesel dyke’ and ‘butch,’ an entry on a salon.com blog from that year reads “Quilts have traditionally been the way that women could express political opinions. “The L Word” quilt can be seen as a serious piece about an important social issue.....and the Guild wimped out. From their decision, the DeKalb County Quilters Guild has shown that they believe that quilts should just be for decoration.”