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Artists
Karen Dolmanisth - Theological Reversals
Deborah Masters - Lost and Found Souls
September 7 to October 6, 2002
Deborah Masters and Karen Dolmanisth, two accomplished artists,
transform Smack Mellon's spectacular gallery with their large
scale, site specific installations. In a world where the absence
of the sacred is so prevalent, their intuitive investigations
lead us through an exploration of finding what is sacred in living
and dying.
Enter Smack Mellon between September 7th and October 6th and you
will be enshrined by an entanglement of black birch branches,
silk slips and girls dresses embroidered with nails and shells,
strung from thin cotton strings that rise to the full height of
the gallery's 40' ceiling. Beautiful mandalas of obsessively placed
bits of sand, stone, corn and crushed glass circle the floor.
Majestic ghost-like figures with oversized concrete heads and
flowing fabric bodies float to a 30 foot height, like guards watching
over the highly detailed and intricate alters that line the walls
of the gallery.
The two installations, Karen Dolmanisth's Theological Reversals
and Deborah Masters' Lost and Found Souls, both take full
advantage of Smack Mellon's unusual cavernous gallery space. Originally
constructed as a foundry in the mid 1800s the building became
home to a spice grinding company in the mid 1900s. A think layer
of cinnamon, cardamom and nutmeg still veil the massive wood beam
structure, leaving a strong scent hanging in the air. This history
adds a serendipitous layer to the multidimensional work of Ms.
Dolmanisth and Ms. Masters.
Karen Dolmanisth - Theological Reversals
Mandalas of sand, stones, broken glass, bones, yellow corn, nails,
shells, discarded bottles, feathers, test tubes, kitchen utensils,
knitting needles and tiny baby shoes filled with nails and berries
circle the ground. Baby's dresses, women's slips and evening dresses
embroidered with shells, nails and forks hang like ghosts in the
still air. Violence and decoration, beauty and beast. Are they
floating or falling, arrested in space or in memory? Karen Dolmanisth's
obsessive installation depicts the spirit of woman rising, floating
and resurrecting.
Dolmanisth's work is about witnessing and experiencing various
forms of oppression with the hope that these things will change,
and that as human beings we will each do our part to change and
heal the human imbalances and abuses of power. "I depend
on the constant making of art, and of making new and appropriate
art forms; of expression to channel higher, deeper truths, realities,
meanings, and mysteries; of existence to myself, my culture and
time; and to transform and to safely integrate the existence of
histories, and present embodied study and information of the horrors,
the great sadness, the imbalances, and the traumas of human separation
from the Creative Source that exists to such tragic proportions
in our current paradigm."
Deborah Masters - Lost and Found Souls
Masters' Altars create an atmosphere of sanctuary with a dense
mass of objects, icons and idols from many religions and belief
systems. She takes us beyond the examination of one religious
or societal structure into a discussion of community, environment,
spirituality and worship from ancient religions to present day
cults.
Lost and Found Souls is a group of altars, hanging "ghosts",
and freestanding sculptures exploring grief, lost life, the nature
of someone never known, periods of great happiness, cultural phenomena,
and our society's misguided dumping of chemicals on the environment.
Master's Greek Orthodox family origin, her childhood years in
Pennsylvania, Mexico, Texas, and New Mexico, her travels through
Central America with her mother as a young girl, and her college
studies of Medieval and Byzantine Art all inform this body of
work.
Each of the 15 altars explores a different narrative: Twentieth
Century Icons is a representation of 20th Century lack of
spiritual belief, depicting current trends that fanatically replace
religion; Science and Technology speaks of positive modern
technology and simultaneously berates the use of earth-toxifying
chemicals; 223 Water Street tells the story of the destruction
of a loft building and loss of homes; Catholic Women's Altar
includes objects collected by women at church or on pilgrimages;
Pennsylvania Childhood and Mexican Childhood explore
Masters earliest years; the Power Woman Altar and the Machismo
Altar are explorations of the trans-migration of myth from Africa
through the Caribbean to Mexico, New Mexico and Texas and of the
pagan adopted accoutrements of the church. Fathers and Marriages
is a search for her father, and the lost souls of her husbands.
Master's Altars are comprised of hundreds of objects, many made
by the artist. These include found objects and devotional artifacts,
icons of saints, relics, ointments, personal mementos, and drawings.
Central to many of the altars are books Masters made to depict
the theme of that altar.
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