Review | The Renwick Invitational showcases contemporary Native craft

Review | The Renwick Invitational showcases contemporary Native craft

Traditional craft motifs and techniques underlie the 55 works on view in “Sharing Honors and Burdens: Renwick Invitational 2023,” the 10th installment of the Renwick Gallery’s biennial showcase of contemporary craft. But the six Native American and Alaska Native participants in this show blend the time-tested with the innovative, sometimes venturing into territory that isn’t very traditional at all.

Thus Joe Feddersen (Arrow Lakes/Okanagan) draws on the landscapes and artifacts of his native Washington state yet often works in glass, which was introduced to the Americas by Europeans. Feddersen, who had a show last year at D.C.’s National Academy of Sciences, reproduces the forms of ancient, carved-stone petroglyphs in glass, on prints and woven into baskets. Alongside primeval images of people and animals, the artist also memorializes modern-day totems: the metal towers that support high-voltage electrical transmission lines.

Feddersen made one of the show’s largest and most striking pieces: “Charmed (Bestiary)” is an array of signs and symbols rendered in clear glass and hanging together in a sort of curtain wall that stretches nearly from ceiling to floor. The result is open yet imposing, and given even more presence by the elaborate shadows the individual glass pieces cast.

The most urban — and among the most personal — works are by Maggie Thompson (Fond du Lac Ojibwe), a textile artist based in Minneapolis-St. Paul. Two of her pieces allude to unhealthy or abusive relationships. “The Equivocator” is a jumble of rope whose strands are stuffed inside stockings, suggesting a stomach tied in knots; “I Get Mad Because I Love You” repeats that phrase dozens of times in lettering made of white and silver beads.

Thompson also contributed “On Loving,” a set of three body bags inspired by the utilitarian container in which her father’s corpse was taken away by coroners. The artist’s bags reproduce the original, but with the added adornment of a morning-star pattern often seen on Ojibwe quilts. The juxtaposition suggests that tradition can comfort at a time of loss.

Alaska-born, Santa Fe, N.M.-based Erica Lord (Athabaskan/Inupiat) offers a suite of linked works that explore historical and scientific themes but have private implications. The artist strings glass beads in patterns that depict the DNA of viruses and other diseases that disproportionately affect Native Americans. The pieces take the form of burden straps, once used for carrying supplies, or dog blankets known as tuppies. Seven of the latter are displayed on white canine forms, arranged around a sled to commemorate the 1925 dog-sled relay that delivered diphtheria antitoxin to Nome from Lord’s home village, Nenana. (This was the mission led by Balto, a Siberian husky who became the subject of an animated 1995 movie and a memorial statue erected in New York’s Central Park.)

DNA also defines the identities of Native Americans, many of whom are of diverse parentage. Next to her beaded works, Lord is exhibiting photographs of her tattoos, one of which records the arithmetic of her tribal qualification: 5/16ths. (To legally be Native Alaskan, the percentage must be at least one-quarter.)

Sisters Lily Hope and Ursala Hudson (Tlingit) are weavers who further the craft mastered by their renowned mother, Clarissa Rizal. Hope, who lives in Alaska, has the more traditional style, while the Colorado-based Hudson integrates Indigenous designs into contemporary fashion. Both artists are mostly showing items that are wearable, but Hope’s pieces include “Clarissa’s Fire Dish,” a bark-and-wool vessel made in honor of her mother. Historically, such woven trays were made to be ritually burned as part of the Tlingit tradition of placing food into fire to nourish departed souls.

A basket weaver since the age of 4, Maine’s Geo Neptune (Passamaquoddy) crafts intricate pieces that emulate natural forms. Included here is a cluster of multicolored corncobs, baskets and earrings in the shape and color of strawberries and a beaded basket with a small bird woven into its lid. The transgender (or two-spirit) artist works mostly with sweet grass and black ash, calling attention to the threat to the latter from the emerald ash borer beetle.

Neptune’s twined creations evoke the fragility of nature but also the perseverance of culture. Working with such materials as glass, wool and beads, these six artists craft delicate monuments to Native culture as it was — and is.

Sharing Honors and Burdens: Renwick Invitational 2023

Renwick Gallery, 17th Street and Pennsylvania Avenue NW. americanart.si.edu.

Dates: Through March 31.

Admission: Free.

Portland’s ‘St. Lawrence Arts Center’ unveils new name, expansion plans

Portland’s ‘St. Lawrence Arts Center’ unveils new name, expansion plans

PORTLAND (WGME) — After 22 years as the St. Lawrence Arts Center, artistic organizers decided it was time for change.

The center has now rebranded to become The Hill Arts.

With a new name, comes new purpose. Brenda Garrand, Strategic Director of Marketing and Co-Chair of Development Committee at The Hill Arts, says this new image will bring the Arts Center to the future.

She is one of many working on plans to build a major expansion that would house a 400-seat auditorium that she says will fill a gap in Portland’s performing arts centers. Other local artists agree.

“We have over 6,000 people annually who are coming to our productions,” Classical Uprising Artistic Director Emily Isaacson said. “But we have nowhere to put them.”

Isaacson says for many performances, the venues in Portland are either too big or too small, and the city lacks a mid-sized venue like the one The Hill Arts plans to build.

Aside from the venue space, The Hill Arts planned expansion will host after-school and weekend arts programs for students at East End Community School.

“This place has the potential to be a lot of things to a lot of people,” Garrand said.

David Greenham, Executive Director of Maine Arts Commission, praises the rebrand and expansion plan and hopes that this will bring a new wave of artists to the city.

“I think that art can happen in any place, in any space,” Greenham said. “But I think their compelling case about the need for a mid-size space certainly is important for Portland.”

The project received approval from the City of Portland Planning Department in May, 2023, but still needs to raise about $10 million to complete construction. Organizers say they hope to break ground on the expansion by 2025.

WYSO Public Radio hires new development and marketing director

WYSO Public Radio hires new development and marketing director
image

Yellow Springs, Ohio — Coming on board as WYSO Public Radio is poised for continued significant growth, long-time local fundraising professional Amanda Burks has joined the WYSO team to lead donor and grant development, as well as the station’s marketing efforts.

Burks has raised more than $22 million through capital campaigns and through general fund raising events in her 15-plus year career in Dayton, for such iconic local nonprofits as Ronald McDonald House Charities, Hospice of Dayton Foundation and the Dayton Art Institute.

She also has several years of experience in strategic marketing, having worked as vice president of vellaInc. Public Relations and Marketing Communications.

General Manager Luke Dennis said he is eager to work with Burks to build on the institutional and individual donor development that he and Major Gift Officer Sara Woodhull have been leading for the past three years.

“Amanda is a natural leader, a strategic thinker and an excellent communicator with proven nonprofit fundraising and marketing experience,” he said. “She also has great connections in this community, and I know that she will help us expand general support as well as funding for such projects as our new headquarters in Yellow Springs, our satellite studio in downtown Dayton and the unique programming that the Center for Community Voices produces.”

“Having been an avid listener and sustaining member for many years, I am honored to have this opportunity to serve the organization in a new and meaningful way,” said Burks, who also will manage grant development and lead the station’s membership, marketing and event staff to grow listenership and raise WYSO’s profile. “WYSO has long been a pillar of our community, and with so much growth on the horizon, this is an exciting time to join the team.”

Copyright 2023 WYSO. To see more, visit https://www.wyso.org.

Paul Ickovic obituary

Paul Ickovic obituary

Paul Ickovic, who has died aged 79, belonged to a generation of humanist photographers who strove to capture the poetry in ordinary lives with a compassionate lens. His nomadic early life had taught him to reject states and borders, and for him there was no state above that of human. He roamed the world’s streets in a search for moments that would spark discomfort and joy.

His photographs were often of solitary figures, capturing their moments of introspection and alienation; a chambermaid in Prague, a diner in Boston or a Cuban waitress. Location was unimportant, for he wanted the viewer to extrapolate from a single image and recognise something of themselves – to be upset or uplifted by the reflection. Yet he was always taciturn about the meaning of his photography, once saying: “It needs no explanation; if the work is provocative, it needs only to exist.”

Though Ickovic’s work was less well known than that of contemporaries such as Josef Koudelka, Louis Faurer and Henri Cartier-Bresson, his images have been widely exhibited, notably at the International Centre of Photography in New York and the Bibliothèque Nationale de France in Paris. The Museum of Modern Art in New York and the National Gallery Prague also acquired his work, and his photographs were collected together in several books.

Phantom at Odeon, Paris, 1964.

Ickovic’s craft was rooted in the events of 1939, when the Jewish citizens of Prague were scrambling to escape German occupation. His mother, Vera Mandel, then an 18-year-old, was put on a plane to London; her parents planned to join her but were captured and perished in concentration camps.

Around the same time a 25-year-old chemist, Eugene Ickovic, stuffed his formulas and passport into a small suitcase and travelled across Europe before joining the British Army’s Czech Brigade. On leave in Britain, at a dance, he met Vera, and they were married in 1943. A year later, in Kettering, Northamptonshire, she gave birth to Paul, who was christened Pavel.

At the end of the second world war, the family returned to Czechoslovakia, where his brother, Tomas, was born. His father set up a pharmaceuticals factory, but it soon became apparent that the occupying Russians were there to stay and so in 1949 the family left for Colombia. In Bogotá the Ickovics learned Spanish and Pavel became known as Pablo.

After a military coup in 1953, the family fled again, on a freighter bound for Canada. When they finally settled in New York in 1957, 13-year-old Pablo learned to speak English and became Paul.

At Forest Hills high school in New York his first love was jazz. He went on to study music at Queens College and, inspired by Django Reinhardt, learned the guitar. However, when he realised he would never be as good as his hero he put his guitar away. His parents gave him $1,000 to get started in life and he immediately left for India and Nepal, where he first picked up and taught himself how to use a camera.

Later he fetched up in Paris, where he took what he believed was his greatest photograph. In the instant before the doors closed on a Metro train, he saw a figure on the platform and released the shutter of his Leica without hesitation. The Phantom at Odéon, Paris, 1964 captures an enigmatic, timeless apparition. Ickovic learned that you must “shoot first, think later” as “the second frame is always a desperate attempt to recapture the first”. Faurer, who became his mentor, was effusive about the work – and Ickovic’s love of photography was cemented.

Boy With Glasses, Prague, by Paul Ickovic.

His ambition was great, but his pockets were often empty. Friends, family and patrons gave him advances, bailed him out, overlooked debts. He blagged cheap flights and sold his possessions. He packed lingerie for trips to Havana, where he could trade undies for food and hotel rooms. His wanderlust was too strong for him to remain tethered by money.

In 1969 the state of Vermont in the US became the base from which he honed his craft. On the streets and in bars Ickovic felt the pulse, arguing that “one needs to walk the gutters as much as the sidewalks in the hunt for the magic to unfold”.

That hunt came plagued with self-doubt. He would not accept mediocrity and in the early 1970s, following criticism of his work, he attempted to burn all his negatives. A girlfriend intervened, but much was lost. Nonetheless, he had the courage to pursue his vision and recognition followed. In 1977 his first book, In Transit, was published.

A self-professed vagabond, Ickovic had the roguish charm of an elegant, down-at-heel European aesthete, underpinned by his itinerant lifestyle, his husky voice and his love of beautiful objects.

Following acclaim for his 1986 collection of photographs, Kafka’s Grave & Other Stories, he moved to Sag Harbor in New York state, where he became part of the local artistic community. From there he travelled to eastern Europe to document the societal changes that followed the fall of the Berlin Wall, and in 1991 a further collection of his photographs, Safe Conduct, was published.

After that, Ickovic’s output began to wane. He was not interested in the new mediums of colour film or digital photography, and began to concentrate his energies on producing exhibitions of his work and on painting.

He tried life on Long Island and then in Amherst, Massachusetts, until, at the age of 72, he placed his precious prints and notebooks into his prized possession, his father’s small suitcase, and moved into a ruined apartment in the medieval centre of Ljubljana, Slovenia. He turned his home into a bohemian palace and for a time was happy.

A retrospective in France opened at the Bibliothèque Nationale in 2021, but due to Covid-19 the number of visitors was small and press coverage was limited, while the accompanying monograph, Ickovic, a book he had poured his heart and soul into, languished. The disappointment prompted him to make one final move, to Prague.

There his health deteriorated and severe back pain prevented him from walking the streets with his camera. However, he maintained his interest in the human condition to the end.

Ickovic was married and divorced twice. He is survived by two sons, Nicholas, from his second marriage, to the model Simona Zborilova, and Cristian, from a later relationship with the art gallery owner Karin Sanders, and his brother.

Paul (Pavel) David Ickovic, photographer, born 16 March 1944; died 23 May 2023

SheClicks Women in Photography Podcast launches

SheClicks Women in Photography Podcast launches

SheClicks, the community for female photographers that I started in 2018, has launched a podcast that features women in the photographic industry talking about their experiences and what drives them.

In the podcast, called SheClicks Women in Photography, I interview women from the photography business, to gain insight into how they got to where they are now.

The guest in the first episode is Cristina Mittermeier, a widely respected marine biologist, conservationist, photographer and filmmaker. She’s a co-founder of SeaLegacy, a global marketing, education and communication for the agency, which draws on her visual storytelling capability to convey environmental and conservation messages. Along with Paul Nicklen and Chase Teron, Cristina also founded 100 for the Ocean, a print fundraiser for ocean conservation.

In addition, Cristina is a Sony imaging ambassador, the recipient of the first SheClicks Lifetime Achievement Award and was the first female photographer to reach over 1 million followers on Instagram.

In the first episode, Cristina explains the thinking behind the formation of 100 for the Ocean and how the team called upon fellow photographers to contribute images to sell as prints to raise money. She also shares how recognising the power of photography to raise awareness of issues close to her heart led her to switch from being a scientist to becoming a photographer.

In each episode, I also ask the guest six questions from SheClicks members, asking the guest to pick six numbers from one to ten.

Future guests include Kim Grant, a Scottish photographer, photographic workshop leader and Nikon Creative, Rachael Talibart who is best known for her fine art images of the ocean, US-based high-end wedding photographer Makayla Jade Harris, Elke Vogelsang, well known for her dog photography, multi-talented music photographer Christie Goodwin, and world-renowned fashion photography, Lindsay Adler.

The SheClicks Women in Photography podcast is available on all the main podcast platforms including Apple Podcasts and Spotify, and via sheclickspodcast.net.

Thanks to Lensbaby, and in support of 100 for the Ocean, listeners have to opportunity to win one of Cristina Mittermeier’s prints.