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POMP

Posted on Thursday, September 2nd, 2010 at 1:44 pm

http://www.vimeo.com/14469746  

Performing as a terrifying monarch, Emily Slaughter holds a long lock of hair in her teeth. (Is it the remainder of an errant subject?) She emits howling, grunting sounds. Her truly frightening performance, titled The Queen, plays on a continuous loop inside POMP, a fascinating exhibition from eight Baltimore women at the Fifth Dimension, most often a performance venue. The show examines how we express our beliefs through the accoutrements of pageants and parades.   

Sarah Matson, Disease Chair. Photo by Alex Ebstein, Posted on http://thereweretentigers.blogspot.com

From a distance, Sarah Matson’s chair in POMP, covered in celadon silk, beckons me, offering a place to relax. But as I draw closer, I see that its surface is covered with wandering patterns created with lace, ruffles, and tufted fabric. The glistening surface of the slipcover is occasionally punctuated with small, horn-like projections, each topped by antenna (stamens from artificial flowers) that would tickle you if you dared to sit down.  

Sarah revealed to me in a conversation that these are fiber lesions and the chair, despite its elegant beauty, is sick, perhaps with something serious, like cancer.  At this, I can’t help myself. I imagine an entire house filled with slip-covered furniture, each piece the victim of a different ailment.  This might be even more disquieting than bed bugs!  

Stefani Levin, Collection. Photo by Alex Ebstein, Posted on http://thereweretentigers.blogspot.com

Stefani Levin shows Collection, dozens of miniature felt flags arranged carefully in lines across the wall. Each flag bears a small found object—most are the tiny items girls treasure in their dollhouse days.   

Artworks by Alex Worthington. Photo by Alex Ebstein, Posted on http://thereweretentigers.blogspot.com

Alex Worthington’s series of medals, made of wood, tin, and coated pewter, are meant to hang from heavy chains—on the wall or maybe even from a neck.  My favorite, inscribed “Years of tremble. Don’t leave me there,” reminds me of two of my dear friends’ happy love story.  In a New York City disco 20 years ago, at closing time, one said to the other, “You’re not leaving me here, are you?”—and no one has left yet!  

Smaller but equally appealing, Alex’s Heirlooms of Forest Legends contain gesturing hands scratched into circular, oval, or heart shapes.  The fingers seem to form messages, their meaning just beyond my comprehension.  

Two pieces by Amy Boone-McCreesh provoke extremely different moods. All Hail is cheerful in excess—pink and white fabric, netting, and shredded tissue paper spill from a cone stuffed with small red and pink balls—maybe candy.  Across the room, in Solitary Circle of Nothing, a forlorn wreath hangs above a form that must be a head.  You can’t see the head’s features, but you feel its pain as five skewers punctuate it.  

All Hail

 

Solitary Circle

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

   

 

 

 

The show also includes work by Clarissa Gregory, Sarah Jablecki, and Antoinette Suitor. You can see POMP by appointment until September 4. Email POMPappt@gmail.com.

Filed in: Fifth Dimension.



 

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  • About Doreen Bolger

    Doreen Bolger is always on the move because she can’t stop seeing, supporting, and writing about the arts in and around Baltimore City. Her lengthy love affair for the arts began in Long Island when her father, an executive in the textile industry, brought home breathtaking fabrics every night from the heart of the garment district.

    Since becoming the Director of the Baltimore Museum of Art in 1998, Doreen has reinvigorated the BMA’s commitment to look within the Museum’s world-renowned collections to organize major nationally and internationally traveling exhibitions, furthering Baltimore’s reputation as a cultural destination.

    Part of Doreen’s delight in leading the BMA is that the Museum has free admission for everyone, everyday.

    Before reaching Baltimore, Doreen directed the Museum of Art at the Rhode Island School of Design. There, she realized the importance of working with living artists and the impact they have on their communities.

    She spent 15 years on the curatorial staff at The Metropolitan Museum of Art before leaving New York for Texas and the Amon Carter Museum. With a Ph.D. in Art History, Doreen is an expert in 19th-century American painting and has written extensively about the subject.

    Doreen currently serves as a board member of the Greater Baltimore Cultural Alliance, Maryland Citizens for the Arts, the Central Baltimore Partnership, and the Charles Street Development Corporation.

    If you ask her who her favorite artist is, she quickly answers “Thomas Eakins!” before recalling William Michael Harnett and J. Alden Weir.

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