Embroidered (re)readings of Frida Kahlo
Transcription
Embroidered (re)readings of Frida Kahlo
Embroidered (re)readings of Frida Kahlo – an interwoven biographical action-research on women handcraft Edla Eggert1 During the last years I have conducted a research project about the educational processes involved in the production of handcrafts made by women in the state of Rio Grande do Sul (Eggert, 2011). In the development of this empirical research I met an embroideress: Ivone Junqueira. In her recent work, she develops different textile handcraft techniques accomplishing what I call a rereading of Frida Kahlo’s work. I understand them as rereadings2, in the context of what Feminist theories have accomplished in the last century through a circle of hermeneutical suspicion (Fiorenza,1988; Eggert, 1999), considering that in her work, she doesn’t only reproduce the images and pictorial discourses created by Frida Kahlo, but interweaves her own life experiences, and those of other women, in a process of recreating those images and discourses for a contemporary audience, at the same time !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! "!#$$%&'()*$%!$+!*,-!.%$/%)0!$+!.$1*23%)&4)*'$(!'(!5&46)*'$(!$+!7('1'($18! 9!:(! *,-! .$%*4/4-1-! ;)(/4)/-<! '*! '1! =$11'>;-! *$! >%'(/! *$! *,-! *-?*! *,-! 4(&-%1*)(&'(/! $+! *,-! '&-)! $+! %-%-)&'(/8! :(! *,-! -0>%$'&-%@! *-6,('A4-1<! '*! 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Those re-readings are accomplished through needles, pieces of cloth and strings in a unique way and are invited to an analytical dialogue in my process of research seeking to make visible the creation in the handcraft made by women and the educational processes resulting from it. The handcraft technology has been made invisible throughout the centuries and that women have a long history of intimacy with strings, needles, pieces of cloth, looms and scissors. On the other hand, the industrial technology caused an almost everlasting detachment from manual work. However, little by little, the abilities of manual embroidery, weaving, lace and many other manual crafts that unleash a thinking doing, as it was emphasized by Richard Sennet (2009), which leads us to creation, are restored. In Brazil, just as in many other parts of the world, including Mexico, there are admirers of Frida Kahlo and her work. Her life and her work inspire people beyond the borders of who she was and what she accomplished, through the knowledge that she was able to create on many levels. Her life as a woman and her work as a painter are so mixed together that they become an artifact that, as a process of knowledge production about herself and her world, enables the re-creation of this process in new educational and epistemological ways. In the recognition of the knowledge produced in the manual craft, the beautiful and the useful – as pointed out by Otávio Paz (1979) – have to be taken in account. In that sense, I want to make way for the embroideress who was infatuated and inspired by the history of that painter to the point of engaging her in a recreation process. And I join her, for I admire the work of Frida Kahlo as well, and have engaged myself in a process of re-reading her work through texts in the organization of a book that proposes a dialogue with paintings in the context of Latin-American Theology (Eggert, 2008). The Feminist movement has been a space for denunciations, experimentations and announcements. Embroidery takes us to the feminine daily life which has been forgotten and ignored in almost every area of knowledge, even in Feminism, for embroidering was, to a great extent, a representation of reclusion, resignation and oppression. Choosing traditional women’s work, in the sense that it has been delegated to women as an unimportant task, such as handcraft, and in this case embroidery, makes it possible to compose scenes and weavings so that other (re)readings may happen. In the process of accomplishing my empirical research with artisan women, still made invisible, I came to understand that they seek acknowledgement. Therefore, in this paper, I seek to initiate a dialogue with some artwork craftly embroidered with a technique that we will call overlapping of fabrics recreated by Ivone Junqueira from Frida Kahlo’s paintings (2009, 2010, 2011, 2012). The life stories of the embroideress, the plastic artist and the researcher (myself) will be the motive of a narrative production which aims to demonstrate the possibilities that may arise when we are open for a methodological dialogue that instigates reaction of the other and the implication of this other in the research we conduct. The beautiful and the useful of a purse The embroideress Ivone Junqueira took to herself the idea of innumerable possibilities of (re)reading Frida Kahlo. She took the purse, read the book and also watched the movie about the painter’s life story. She accepted the (in)formal and (un)conscious challenge to continue the process of constructing educational and epistemological ways outside of the traditional and established manuals. The paths of the embroideress (Junqueira) and the researcher (Eggert) crossed when I was developing a research project at Vera Junqueira’s (Ivone’s daughter) weaving shop, in Alvorada County, in 2007. In one of my visits, conducted during the year of 2008, the embroidress was at the shop and saw the purse I was using that day. The purse had a reproduction of one of Frida Kahlo’s self-portraits, handcraft made. Ivone made a comment about how beautiful the purse’s embroidery was and someone mentioned that a book about the Mexican painter had been released with (re)readings of her paintings by Latin-American theologians (Eggert 2008). She was immediately interested and in the next visit I gave her the book as a gift. The embroidress also asked to see the purse more closely so that she could see more thoroughly the techniques used in that handcraft work. Interweaving artifacts, conversations and experiences, we were starting a process of recreation which involved educational and epistemological aspects. The overlapping of stories was immediate. Ivone is a woman who at the time of our encounter was 67 years old, widow, grandmother, and just like many other women, lived the confrontation of a marriage which kept her as being wife of one man, mother, caregiver without her own name. It was not necessary to make her many questions, Ivone’s the life story was not in the agenda, but rather Frida’s story, (re)read in the story of Ivone. Since the first encounter between the researcher and the embroideress, there were sayings which were produced through embroidery and not words, as it is usually done when interviewing a participant of a research with objective questions. Meanwhile, Ivone was already producing her material re-readings, embroidering Frida Kahlo’s paintings. In 2009, the daughter of the embroidery enrolled one of the embroidered pieces entitled “Frida Kahlo’s Holy Feast” in a contest of a bank’s foundation. This piece won the prize and her work came to the public. At my participant observations I registered the pieces which were being made throughout my visits. I observed that when that piece was finished, delivered and prized, the embroideress went through a sort of stress during the final stage of production. Just as in any ordered work in the intellectual field, for instance an article, a lecture. She had a pain crisis and was unable to embroider for many months. Embroidery just like every manual work, when repeated excessively cause injuries. In that case, the embroideress, I joked, had embodied the character of Frida Kahlo. She was crippled. The embroidered (re)readings of Frida Kahlo, added up to the purpose of other readings we made of that painter, born in 1907, of the embroideress, born 1942 and of the reasearcher, born in 1964. Women who read themselves through the experiences of pain in their bodies as well as in their political and affectionate life. Erotic, we produce through strong colors, daily and autobiographical themes that reveal the materiality of our experiences, when beauty and usefulness coincide. Pedagogical processes in the production of Brazilian handcraft The production of Brazilian handcraft is very rich throughout the country. From Northeastern lace, pottery, tressed hay, knife grips, weaving, embroidery, tricot stich, to crochet and sewing, these arts are considerably a great measure of an almost invisible production, the source of a “creative economy”. The question we would like to pose is why the handcraft is seen at tourist stores, bus stations, and airports, but rarely is the connection made between the formation of who produces this material culture with the local development and its complex processes of production. We suspect, based on the data that has been collected in our research that the fact that this production is done mostly by women (and poor women) and in their domestic space is that what makes it invisible. The knowledge of these occupations gets lost and is less appreciated by the women themselves, as well as for those who buy the final product. The research done in that context is characterized by participation along with the group. The principles of participant research and actionresearch compromise forces the one who is researching to make a way of comings and goings back and forth with the field. Assure that the systematization of knowledge be not only presented to be analyzed by the academy, but for the people themselves who let our coming inside the field, a place where our theoretical questions about the practice come to life. To follow handcraft groups throughout Brazil with a pedagogical perspective which is imbedded is also resound in the classrooms with the Youth and the adults, other ways of thinking of a school for those who could not conclude their studies in this large country. Discovering artisans such as Ivone Junqueira in this research amplified even more the study about women and their creation in handcraft. We learn to make connections about the creative processes and the lives of the invisible artisans themselves who multiplied the colors and the drawings of their daily lives, giving new meanings for their pains. Aiming to make the creation process more visible is the reason why we produced this catalogue. Rehearsal of a long path which we still have much much farther to go, meaning, engaging in dialogue between places apparently distant: the academy and the studio/shop, each with their singularities. The interwoven biographic In light of the process narrated above, I present some paintings by Frida Kahlo, embroidered by Ivone Junqueira and (re)read by some authors of the book (Re)readings of Frida Kahlo (Eggert, 2008). It is a three-dimensional composition taken as a methodological exercise of gathering different processes of production which has as its background the biography as a way to the self, reminding Marie Christine Josso (2004, 2007). A Few Little Pricks The painting denounces the overall reality of violence against women. It portrays the news read by Frida Kahlo on a newspaper which caused solidarity with the victim. The murderer stated, before the judge, that those were only a few “blows” (piquetitos) to the woman who was disturbing him. He did not want to kill her, only scratch her a little (Edla Eggert, 2008, p.78) The woman from “Unos quantos piquetitos” with her body, from her body she speaks/denounces the violence done by a man; even so, Kahlo from her own body also speaks/denounces her pain. In both bodies the vulnerability is evident, and why not think that this helps to identify how many other bodies of women are victims of femicide and thus, make us shout from those bodies that no other woman would ever be victim of such violence. (María Laura Manrique Nava, 2008, p.175) Self potrait with hair cut This is a painting of impact. There is a profound silence in the selfrepresentation imagery of this work, silence as presence, meaning and knowledge. It is a silence that speaks, that offers discourse. Apparently this work presents Frida as non-emancipated – although she was involved with emancipatory process of the communist movement of her country, constructed an identity having as its references the other sex, her feminine being seems to be rendered and remains attached to standards and unable to filter its degrees. It seems that there is no freedom to a new creation, the man and his stereotyped representation is the mirror and the frame. She needs to become a man to have the acknowledgement and be recognized as a woman. But the painting also dismantles this model, moving it to a female body. In this economy of symbolic trades and in an inversion of social roles representation, beauty comes along as capital trade. (Marga Janete Ströher, 2008, p.133) Coluna Rota The beauty of Frida Kahlo is in the exposure of her pain just as it is exposed on her back. The broken back is a Greek column. It is impossible not to remember that the culture which sustains the basis of our Western civilization for more than 2 millennia is the symbol used to present her sorrow, which exacerbates in multiple meanings of the thorns, nails and needles all over her body. The broken back is the column of thinking, art and all the canons of Western civilization. In a heroic life, Frida Kahlo declared to be unsustainable, but equally the only column which she had. (Vitor Westhelle, 2008, p.163) The two Fridas The two fridas calls to the creating potency of an individual and collective identity encounter of a woman constituted by her historicity. To recreate oneself from the self. Representing not a split, rupture between two people in one body, but two beings intimately inter-connected living in the same world, from imaginary/spiritual investments that are part of ourselves. (Ana Claudia Figueroa, 2008, p. 89,90) The little deer The being occupying the center of the picture and of our reflection is a creation of Frida and it is a deer! Despite Frida’s face giving her some peculiarity, the body, the ears and the horns leave no questions left. Her animal body carries the male marks. Her head carries make-up and ornaments (earrings and a crown of branches), social constructions of the feminine. The transgenderedness is an expression of only (one more) one of the frontiers which Frida constantly crosses with tranquility and firmness in her work. Here, the hybridization between the masculine and the feminine sticks to each other in the hybridism between animal and woman. (Musskopf, 2008, p.105) Conclusions still in process: three-dimension biographical actionresearch The characters in this research (re)read themselves and constitute themselves. In our way of interpreting her story, Frida is (re)read in her works and she also rered herself. On the other, we who found her and related to her story, reread ourselves and (re)encountered ourselves, thus producing a way for another interpretation of ourselves. At the moment I started visiting Ivone Junqueira and registering her production/creation, I gave her at each meeting, I actualized and provoked methodological elements which reminds the action-research. But not that one ordered to solve a certain problem, rather one research which will get shaped as we interact and expose ourselves in the different places we occupy in the research. Would that be a way to contribute to amplify the concept of actionresearch? References EGGERT, Edla. A apatia de quem olha: a violência naturalizada. In.: EGGERT, Edla (Org.) [re]Leituras de Frida Kahlo, por uma ética estética da diversidade machucada. Santa Cruz do Sul: EDUNISC, 2008. p. 75-83. FIGUEROA, Ana Claudia. As duas Fridas e eu. In.: EGGERT, Edla (Org.) [re]Leituras de Frida Kahlo, por uma ética estética da diversidade machucada. Santa Cruz do Sul: EDUNISC, 2008. p.84-93. JOSSO, Marie-Christine. Experiências de vida e formação. São Paulo: Cortez, 2004. JOSSO, Marie-Christine. A transformação de si a partir da narração de histórias de vida. In. Revista Educação. Porto Alegre/RS, ano XXX, n. 3 v. 63, p. 413-438, set./dez. 2007. MANRIQUE NAVA, María Laura. Quando el dolor in-digna: genera vida! In.: EGGERT, Edla (Org.) [re]Leituras de Frida Kahlo, por uma ética estética da diversidade machucada. Santa Cruz do Sul: EDUNISC, 2008. p.165-179. MUSSKOPF, André. Veadagens Teológicas. In.: EGGERT, Edla (Org.) [re]Leituras de Frida Kahlo, por uma ética estética da diversidade machucada. Santa Cruz do Sul: EDUNISC, 2008. p.101-120. STRÖHER, Marga Janete. Autorretrato con el pelo cortado – A fabricação de um corpo estético de rupturas. In.: EGGERT, Edla (Org.) [re]Leituras de Frida Kahlo, por uma ética estética da diversidade machucada. Santa Cruz do Sul: EDUNISC, 2008. p.121-138. WESTHELLE, Vitor. Santa Frida com aura e aroma. In.: EGGERT, Edla (Org.) [re]Leituras de Frida Kahlo, por uma ética estética da diversidade machucada. Santa Cruz do Sul: EDUNISC, 2008. p.157-164. EGGERT, Edla. Processos educativos no fazer artesanal de mulheres do Rio Grande do Sul. Santa Cruz do Sul: EDUNISC, 2011. EGGERT, Edla. A mulher e a educação: possibilidades de uma releitura criativa a partir da hermenêutica feminista. Estudos Leopoldenses – série Educação, São Leopoldo, v. 3, n. 5, jul.-dez . 1999. P.19-28. FIORENZA, Elisabeth Schussler. In memory of her: a Feminist Theological Approach of Christian Origins. New York: The Crossroad Publishing Company, 1988. PAZ, Otavio. In/mediaciones. Barcelona: Editorial Seix Barral, 1979. Researches conducted by Professor Edla Eggert (Unisinos) Group contributor: Marli Brun (PhD student) Amanda Motta Castro (PhD student) Cintia Andrea Teixeira Dornelles (PhD student) Gisele Heckler (PhD student) Drª Marcia Alves da Silva (UFPel) Marcia Regina Becker (MA student) Douglas Rosa da Silva (PIBIC) (Undergraduate student) Drª Maria Clara Bueno Fischer (UFRGS) Dr. Telmo Adams (Unisinos) Dr. Danilo Streck Dr. André Sidnei Musskopf Drª Nancy Cardoso Pereira Esp. Vera Junqueira (Technical scholarship Cnpq) !