Stebbins Gallery in Cambridge,
and she was a Nationals Competition Finalist at the Provincetown Art Association
& Museum. Her work also hangs in numerous private collections across the
country and in England.
Motherwells current series of collages incorporates the image of a window
allowing both a literal access into the pictorial surface and a metaphorical
entrance into the affective self of the artist. Psychologically,
the window is a symbol of looking into how I see the world, she reveals.
All the imagery Ive been using has a window effect. There was a
window in my studio in Provincetown where I worked for more than 30 years. Its
etched in my mind. I dont think it was a conscious choice. Motherwell
explains that she began with a 1929 painting by Georgia OKeefe entitled
Black Cross, New Mexico. In this work, a large black cross almost
entirely covers the foreground of OKeefes canvas and bisects the
lower half of the painting, which is enveloped in roiling cloud formations and
crowned by thin horizontal stripes of sunset yellow and orange. Motherwell scans
the upper-half of this painting, so that the black horizontal bar of the cross
assumes the image of a raised window, the thin stripes of orange and red neatly
dividing the pictorial surface in half. In the lower half of her open windows,
she applies photos and other cut images appropriated from disparate sourcescarnations, fields of poppies, trees.
Motherwells initial window, entitled appropriately enough, Georgia
on My Mind, includes a shadow-box black frame that she also scans for
other works in the series. Georgia OKeefe has been a powerful influence
over the years, explains Motherwell. The image of the cross is hers,
and I merely expounded upon it. The depth of the frame mirrors its sacred nature.
I scanned the original collage with the frame and reproduced the image for others
in the series. I keep finding new things to do with it. Im sure it has
to do with the view from my studio in the East End. The windows are a way of
seeing into my mind. The work reflects what goes on in my life.
Black and white have always been very important to me, Motherwell
states. Black is my favorite, and the contrast of black and white is a
recurring theme in my work. But I love the idea of having a little color say
a lot. When I did Georgia on My Mind, the oranges and yellows really
impressed me. I am particularly intrigued with paintings that have small daubs
of color suggesting a much larger area. Color lends an uplifting, hopeful sense
to my pieces. My intention is not to equate black with depression and sadness.
The incorporation of realist imagery with abstract configurations is also carried over in Motherwells |
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"Window: Poppies" collage |
Rosetta collages. She explains that the series was named after a woman named Rosetta, who was my boyfriends grandmother. He had photos of her from the 1920s, and I was struck with her
eyes. Either her face or body or both are in all the Rosetta works. The
compositional structure of the Rosetta series is referenced from another of
Motherwells favorite artists, John Singer Sargent, whom Motherwell admires
for his use of black in his paintings. In works in this series like Sentimental
Journey and Japanese Daydream, the mixture of collaged material
and a light wash of paint lends an ethereal watercolorist translucence to the
imagery.
As with the Window series, the Rosetta collages are contained within a shadow
box. I like the 3-D shadow box effect, explains the artist. Doing
collage is a physical, textural thing. Originally, the shadow box idea was a
way to draw you into the window effect. I liked the way the frame cast shadows
at different times of the day. I like the idea that it makes it more of an object.
When Im framing something, I know what Im looking for without being
exactly able to articulate it. Its like how you know when a paintings
donewhen youve hit what you need to hit. I dont
want an elaborate picture frame. I want it to be part of the piece.
Reflecting on the evolution of her astonishingly beautiful work, Motherwell
says, I think theres going to be more painting and less collaged
imagery in the future. I think I want to work with the collaged work looking
more like a painting. Its going to be really interesting for me this summer,
since Im not living on the water in Provincetown. Im interested
in how this will be reflected in my work. When youre doing non-figurative
work, you dont know what your desired end result will be. It evolves.
You hope it works. And when its done, you know it.
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