Birth of a Nation Project – Detail, Mannequins, Kente Cloth,
Camouflage, Spandex, Satin, and Artifacts, 2015 Birth of a Nation Project by Paul Rucker. “It’s always easier not to think for oneself. Find a nice safe hierarchy and settle in. Don’t make changes, don’t risk disapproval, don’t upset your syndics. It’s always easiest to let yourself be governed.” -Ursula K. Le Guin Who thinks for you? Do you question every scrap of information that you hear each and every day or do you allow moments to become mantras, omissions to become origin stories, carrying on without asking what really happened? We grow up hearing the repetition of lies and half truths, these things are said to us for so long and so frequently that they become the very fabric of our reality despite their own basis in the
same.
Paul Rucker recently gave a TED Talk and spoke to us from TED Talk
headquarters in Vancouver where he was one of 20 fellows. Rucker was one of thousands of applicants for the 20 spots. His talk was about his work in the context of the theme of the normalization of systemic racism. Rucker says many of the policies that the Ku Klux Klan wished to have in place 100 years ago regarding segregation have come to fruition in either official or non-official ways. Rucker is also part of an upcoming group show at Institute for Contemporary Art in Richmond, VA titled
Declaration. Rucker’s piece for the show titled Storm in the Time of Shelter is comprised of 52 KKK robes he created. Alongside these will be KKK artifacts from the 1900s and other pieces up to and including Nazi artifacts. The work addresses not only the changing form of systemic and structural policies as well as the period of time in the 1920s during which the Ku Klux Klan experienced a rapid rise until approximately 5% of the US population were members. The 1915 film Birth of a Nation as
well as post war anti-immigration sentiment fueled this era of the KKK.
One of Rucker’s other works titled Rewind addresses the repetitive nature and evolution of societal ills such as slavery to incarceration or lynching to police shootings, one system to another repeating the same thing over and over again. Of his work
as it relates to current events Rucker says, “I can’t make anything in the gallery that’s more intense than real life. Outside the gallery, people that are unarmed on the phone in the backyard of their grandmother’s are being shot. That’s not happening in my gallery. But I want to go to the root cause of the legacy of this country. One of the reasons I create art is to bring to light, to make the unseen seen, to create empathy and understanding and if it has to be a little scary, it has to be a
little scary.” A sign on the way out the door of the gallery reads, “Objects you see beyond this point you may find disturbing.” Rucker relies in part on grant funding for his work. Last year he was a recipient of the Guggenheim Fellowship. For years no one would fund his work. While his application hasn’t changed much over time, the clear need to address the focus of his work perhaps has. The need to address that our nation’s history is built on slavery has become more and more urgent and
apparent. Rucker’s next project is called That Nice Black Neighborhood, addressing the very real racial disparity in the US. “The destruction of black neighborhoods is part of the plan,” Rucker says. To hear to more from Paul Rucker about his important work, listen to the complete interview. Joan
Waltemath is presently working on a project she began a decade ago titled Treaty of 1868, A Lament. One of the paintings in the series is currently at the American Academy of Arts and Letters. The works themselves are very large, measuring around 14 or 15 feet square. In 2008 while at a residency, Waltemath realized that she didn’t know the full meaning of the Treaty of 1868. Some research taught her that this 150 year old treaty granted the territory where she grew up to the Lakota,
Arapaho, and Cheyenne. Waltemath entered into each piece in the resulting series without really knowing where the work would take her. Waltemath developed a gestural language to create the pieces for the series. It was her intention to capture the feeling she had during different ceremonies within the Lakota spiritual practice. The elegiac feeling of these ceremonies speaks to the decimation of the culture at the hands of encroaching white culture. Her work is complicated because Waltemath
herself is descended from homesteader great-grandparents who had a first hand role in the dispossession of territory. The work is meant to encourage the viewer to see things from multiple viewpoints. At no point is there a stable point of view, all images are informed by the viewer. Waltemath would ultimately like to exhibit all eight pieces in her Treaty of 1868 series together along with programming to coincide with the Native issues they
represent. After creating these works which are made up of scraps of canvas, Waltemath found herself with quite a lot of smaller canvas scraps. She began sewing them together to create other work and found they take on a character all their own. She has shown a few of them and would like to do so again in the future. Waltemath
refers to these scrap art pieces as “the outtakes” to the larger project. To hear more from Joan Waltemath about her large scale work and the complexity behind it, listen to the complete
interview. |
Weekly Grants & Resources for Artists Every week you will find updated resources here to apply for grants, find
residencies and more.
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In our continued Thursday series on available opportunities, we bring you four unique grant, fellowship, and residency opportunities. Each of these are slightly different in their geographical reach, award money, and application requirements.... | Having the confidence to ask for what you need can be one of the hardest parts of shaping your career as an artist. It’s not easy to approach galleries and say that your work is worthy of their walls.... |
In this, our second in a new series of posts exploring some of the many opportunities available to artists of all levels of experience, we bring you some choice precipices from which you may choose to launch your next step.... | Persistence. It can be the
difference between remaining in the running and losing out to someone who is willing to follow up. At the same time, it can feel very uncomfortable to persist when you are trying to make a case for the exhibition of.... |
Let’s talk about opportunities. As you may or may not know, Praxis Center maintains a curated page of artist opportunities. While we try to highlight those that are free of charge, sometimes small fees may apply.You can use this resources page to locate grants.... | I have a friend who needs to know what’s going to happen. She spends hours making plans, every detail is accounted for, her mother says that when she was small she spent all her time setting up for play and no time actually playing.... |
These are positive and / or negative reviews of galleries, art fairs, consultants, writers, online pay to play offers, residencies and more – all written by artists so that other artists can beware of situations where institutions treat artists badly, or that end up
costing the artist money or are outright scams.
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