Anne Sherwood Pundyk, "Pitcher," 2012, Gouache on Paper, 9" x 9"
Anne Sherwood Pundyk, video composite for "Object Classification," 2014
Is the story we associate with an object pressed within its physical
matter like a vinyl recording? Does it replay in our memory when triggered by
our experience of the object? Can these stories be shared through the exchange
or transformation of that object? These
questions are prompted by two projects I worked on this spring centered on
still life paintings. Early in March I got an email from the LES gallery Lisa
Cooley offering the opportunity to participate in
Das Tauschregal (translated
as The Barter Shelf.) It was
part of an “experiment in participatory economics,” conceived of by the painter
Cynthia Daignault wherein I traded an "object of value," -- an old
coffee cup -- for a representational painting of it by her. About the same time
that I relinquished the cup to Daignault, I performed "Object Classification" at the
Last Brucennial, a monumental
community art show put on by Vito Schnabel and The Bruce High Quality
Foundation. In front of more than 40
people gathered in the galleries, I let go of a white, china pitcher
that I had previously used as the subject of a painting. It fell to the
concrete floor and broke. Sharp triangles of porcelain popped and skidded
around my bare feet.
Anne Sherwood Pundyk, "Object Classification" performance, 2014 (photos by Kyle Morrison)
There
is a personal story associated with the cup I submitted to Lisa Cooley. As part of the selection process I was
asked to describe the object on the back of a 3” x 5” index card. I wrote, “My friend Leon Kenyon, III, had lived in
New York City before coming to college in Claremont, CA. He was exotic and
sophisticated about art and life. He made poetic collages and talked about the
abstract power of the color blue. He would serve coffee properly in this cup
when I came over to visit and talk about art and art history. Once when we were
walking together he found laying on the street a page out of a magazine
featuring a woman’s breasts. He matter-of-factly put the page on his
refrigerator with a magnet. Somehow, over all these many years, I have kept the
cup. It is small and round and creamy white. On the bottom of the cup it says
“USA.” Leon inspired what I consider to be my first real work of art, this
collage:
Anne Sherwood Pundyk, "Pink Pacific," 1978, 30" x 18", mixed media
During “Object Classification," a video
montage of layered source imagery for my small gouache still life streamed
over me. Before dropping the pitcher I explained to the audience, “For over 20
years I made paintings of cups and pitchers…They were objects of reassurance.
They contained my stories…But, after all those years, I wanted to be able to
tell my stories, to
participate in them,
become them through their retelling.”
The
video included short clips from
family trips and popular entertainment we enjoy together.
Outside the gallery’s window walls, the streets of New York City’s
meat packing district were flooded with shoppers and the sunshine of an
unseasonably warm mid-March afternoon.
My performance was part of “
Sacred Nipples: Feminist VideoScreening and Discussion.” The art collective, Go! Push Pops -- with Katie
Cercone and Elisa Garcia de la Huerta -- and I organized the event because this
year
The Last Brucennial included only women artists: 660 in total. (Similarly, the one-day exhibition up at the same time,
The Whitney Houston Biennial, curated by Christine Finley featured over 80 women artists.) Just as I
had sought to get deeper inside the subject matter for my paintings, the
audiences’ discussion after the videos and performances focused on
transformation and choosing to challenge outdated rules. Feminism and the
mechanisms of inequity within the art market were topics of interest, bringing
together a diverse audience.
For the Lisa Cooley
exhibition, Daignault transformed my cup and 30 other objects into small,
representational paintings. According to the gallery, “Since the paintings were
installed concurrently with the Frieze Art Fair, Das Tauschregal
suggests an alternative art market, exploring the notions of value independent
of price.” The paintings were on display from the beginning of
the Frieze Art Fair, which took place on Randall’s Island and was attended by 50,000
people over a four-day period, but they were installed at 6 Decades Books
located on Canal Street. While the show was up through May 31st, the
store is only open two days a week. I would be surprised if 200 people saw the
show.
Cup traded for a painting
Cynthia Daignault, Das Tauschregal, installation view courtesy of Lisa Cooley Gallery
Daignault’s expression of an alternative value system, was segregated
from the mainstream art market that predominately serves institutions lead by
white men. We concluded at the Last Brucennial discussion that having a large, supportive audience – in
galleries, museums, in collections and in the press -- improves the chances of
keeping the stories not yet given their proper due alive through their
retelling.
Clitney Perennial preparations in Anne Sherwood Pundyk's studio
included Sienna Shields, Anne Sherwood Pundyk, Katie Cercone,
Elisa Garcia de la Huerta, and Asha Man (Photo by Andrew Hutner)
Two Months later, as a corollary to the conversations started around
the Last Brucennial, Go Push Pops!, Asha Man and I lead an activist art
happening at the Whitney Biennial called
The Clitney Perennial. Our goal was to reinforce the existence of inequitable
gender and racial representation in the exhibition. The event was inherently
defiant; we did not seek the museum’s permission. We took the risk of expulsion
or worse to show by example what is necessary to fight for important social
changes. We were pleased to have endorsements from artists such as Suzanne Lacy
and The Guerrilla Girls. We acted in solidarity with members of the
Yams Collective, who had pulled their video “Good Stock on the Dimension Floor: An
Opera, 2014” from the Biennial days before to protest the institutionalized
white supremacy embodied by the museum. Throughout the evening, informal
dialogue between participants and audience members touched on many personal
examples of limiting and destructive treatment in the art world. The
camaraderie we felt was fueled by the open structure of the event, the
opportunity to raise awareness, and by the sense of unity bonding those who had
chosen to embrace the risk of speaking out.
Clitney Perennial at The Whitney Museum (photo by Jillian Steinhauer)
Clitney Perennial Poster by Anne Sherwood Pundyk
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