Artist Statement for The Hunt
"Another
day or two -- and the final transformation occurs. The pupa splits as the caterpillar
had split -- it is really a last glorified molt, and the butterfly creeps out
-- and in its turn hangs down from the twig to dry.
You will ask -- what
is the feeling of hatching? Oh, no doubt, there is a rush of panic to the head,
a thrill of breathless and strange sensation, but then the eyes see, in a flow
of sunshine, the butterfly sees the world
" wrote the Russian writer
Vladimir Nabokov in 1951. Nineteen years earlier American philosopher John Dewey
asked, "How shall the individual re-find himself in an unprecedented new
social situation, and what qualities will the new individualism exhibit?"
Re-finding oneself may require a search.
In
The Hunt, dozens of glistening, hanging cocoons evoke images of a meat
locker and ideas of metamorphosis. Suspended from the ceiling, four sets of
rusty, barbed hoops cage and cradle individual cocoons. A few ghostly forms
suggesting body bags occupy the floor. Only after viewers walk through this
setting do they find Chrysalis, a translucent-silk, shapely female form
hanging on the back wall.
In
its sometimes-startling recognition of the familiar, The Hunt celebrates
the idea of the ability for transformation and individuality in society. What
started as clean, if used, white bed sheets turn into ones identified by rust,
hair, paint and thread. After being coated and wrapped around human models,
the sheets slowly stiffen into empty husks with their own identities. A cocoon
made from a hospital-bed sheet, carefully cradled in rusty hoops, holds translucent-silk
pockets of dark curly hair. A sparse black body print marks the interior of
an otherwise plain form. A pretty, pink-flowered sheet reveals bits of blond
hair barely noticeable amidst its rusty interior. Black and brown stitches suture
one cocoon cavity while embroidery embellishes another.
The
transformative aspect of The Hunt extends to the process of its creation.
Dozens of college students and members of the community worked on the project
as models and installation assistants. The circumstance of each casting fills
the work with an often-unexpected narrative or symbolic dimension. Subjected
to a sometimes-difficult task, the models emerge from their stiffened cocoons
as if shedding old skin. The cocoons reveal the physical/emotional state of
their models - several young college students seemingly took delight in lying
down on cold hard floors. Some even slept as their skins slowly stiffened around
them to form beautiful shapes. Models who were not comfortable during the process
often shed tight or twisted cocoons. The golden shell of Chrysalis completes
the installation, representing in process and product the experience of metamorphosis.
In the same way the butterfly leaves behind its pupa, the young woman who modeled
for this translucent-silk piece emerged from her cocoon to reenter the world
with a new experience. The resulting form acts as a testament to growth.