• Queers, Crime, Midgets & Murder – Maya Pindyck

    Date posted: May 1, 2006 Author: jolanta

    Queers, Crime, Midgets & Murder

    Maya Pindyck

    First find Brooklyn
    Fire Proof Inc. then prepare yourself for a treat far more profound than the
    vaudevillian title hiccups. “Queers?” Expect sepia colored paintings
    of women enjoying love orgies in the grand old style of male master painting/bating.
    “Crime” refers to nostalgic portraits of individuals who have been
    executed on death row. “Midgets” actually means combinations of truly
    tiny miniatures, in which the littlest of people enjoy a Sunday afternoon on
    rat bones while the equally wee protest war atop a toy police car. And, finally,
    “Murder” contemplates human suffering on canvas, egg, and wall.

    The four artists are David Adamo, Anitra Haendel, Tereza Mazur, and Jessica Segall.
    This combination of pulp results in a political pulse pumping from one room to
    the next.

    Jessica Segall’s
    “Queer” female subjects emerge from historical paintings, 1850-1950’s
    erotica and antiquated images. What is first striking about these works is how
    classically the scenes are painted. Women across a range of decades, cultures
    and sources are joined together in Segall’s interpretation of Ingres’
    Turkish bath, painted in such as way that it only seems natural they be found
    there together. Another painting recreates Rubens’ “Diana & Castillo”
    in a new and commanding light. Segall invites the viewer to witness timeless
    yet provocative events, happening in the traditional style of painting from a
    feminist mind’s eye.

    At the gallery
    entrance you’ll find Anitra Haendel’s small round portraits of Karla
    Fay Tucker, the first woman to be executed in Texas since the death penalty was
    reinstated in 1863, painted with painful accuracy. A red square reads the number
    of days Karla spent on death row (4,979.) Two small clay guns face each other
    nearby, suggesting this Crime can only achieve a dead-end. Haendel’s comments
    on the consequences of fear extend beyond the realm of humankind. There are also
    animals to consider. Haendel’s massive shark in “Great White”
    is meant to evoke the illusion of fear, but instead translates as an image of
    reverence.

    David Adamo’s
    small worlds make us reconsider our own. Miniature people, rat bones, itty-bitty
    beds and dog molars are dressed up with witty titles, producing both humorous
    and unsettling scenes. Toy exterminators hose down a bed in “The place where
    Grampas die.” A shiny red truck gnarls with upside-down fangs, flaunting
    a giant tongue. A tiny trash pile sits alone. Adamo’s works resonate a relationship
    between the commonalities of everydayness and the enormity of death. The miniature
    activities seem surprisingly urgent, as if belonging to an immeasurable time
    line of events, loss and possibilities.

    For Tereza Mazur “Murder” and “Grief” are sister eggs of
    the same animal. It is the grieving process and internalization of human atrocities
    that Mazur’s paintings address. In “Continuum, Bloody Sunday in Russia,
    1905” people trail off the canvas and onto the wall in an uncontained moment.
    In “My Hands All Over The Massacre” the same image is painted on an
    ostrich egg, its round form carrying a visual weight. Refugees, soldiers and
    survivors are painted roughly, in stark black and white tones. Mazur’s works
    reveal a struggle to believe that an understanding of violence is inseparable
    from an acceptance of its nature.

    And yes, the show
    is open to all—queers, midgets and murderers. Even Texans.

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