Current Issue: Artvoice v7n47, week of Thursday November 20 » back issues
Arts |
Falling in Loveby Cynnie Gaasch |
|
|
There is nothing quite as satisfying as experiencing a substantial exhibition of works by a mature artist. It is still more of a treat if you find yourself falling in love with the artist’s work, and better yet if you have been loving the artist’s work for years. I predict most visitors to Petah Coyne: Above and Beneath the Skin, on exhibit through September 10 at the Albright-Knox Art Gallery, will find themselves lost and falling—into her world, and in love with it. I first fell for the sculpture of Petah Coyne in 1993, as an undergraduate student at Hampshire College, when I had the opportunity to visit her studio in the Williamsburg area of Brooklyn, New York.
The passion with which Coyne speaks about life, art and her sculpture was empowering to me as a young artist. I remember her going on about the beauty of dried fish in Chinatown, which she collected and strung from the ceiling of her apartment. She later covered trees on Houston Street and East Broadway in New York with decaying (and stinky) fish. But her work—the power and strength of it all the time playing with the beauty and delicacy of it is outright seductive. Visiting her cavernous studio in a giant warehouse shared by fellow sculptors of giant works of art—William Tucker, Ed Smith and Lee Tribe—was inspiring. It was a full-out introduction to what it meant to be an artist, entirely consumed in the world of creation.
Curated by Albright-Knox senior curator Douglas Dreispoon, the exhibition has traveled to the Sculpture Center in Long Island City; Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art in Kansas City, Missouri; and the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art in Arizona before returning to Buffalo.
The exhibition at the Albright-Knox proves Coyne’s zeal for creation and infatuation with the beautiful and the ugly in the world around us. Her work is feminine and masculine at the same time. While her large sculpture (often more than eight feet tall) is covered with feathers and silk flowers, its heavy metal core is often visible. The sculptures are usually either black or white, with glimpses of red showing up only occasionally.
In black works, like Untitled #1103 (Daphne), the black feathers suggest a cunning crow and the flowers, usually roses, covered with black wax suggest decay. The curled wires stretching out of the top become the branches of a tree, and here is the mythical goddess in her long dress transforming into a tree, decorated and weathered.
The series of white, chandelier-like sculptures made from 1994 to 1999 are like melting candelabras, baroque symbols of ritual. Coyne’s Catholic upbringing is often present in the imagery and titles of her work, as are other faiths. Untitled #1093 (Buddha Boy) is not as tall as many of her standing sculptures and actually suggests a young Buddhist. This sculpture is covered with white lilies, roses, beads and candles. Underneath the heavy headdress of candles, you can see a young face.
Most of these standing sculptures translate into people (mostly women) wearing elaborately decorated costumes, as if preparing for a ceremony of some sort. The figures always seem to be tied to the earth. The weight of these things is stunning—hundreds of pounds, requiring special moving cases to support the structures in transport. The weight reminds one of the actual weight of the costumes a celebrant might wear; Coyne is showing us the beauty of the world and its burdens.
The works of Petah Coyne are utterly about being female, as evidenced by a series of portraits represented in this show by a piece the Albright-Knox owns, Untitled #978 (Gertrude and Juliana, The Whitney Women). The piece is 12 feet tall and 18 feet wide. It is a wall made of drywall on wooden studs, open at the back. The side facing into the center of the gallery is painted white. There is a woman on either side of the piece, dressed in a saintly costume that reaches well past their feet, trailing across the floor. This piece was made for the 2000 Whitney Biennial and is a portrait of the sisters of the philanthropic Whitney family. On the backside of the sculpture the two women are more exposed, their arms and heads bleeding through the structure. The piece offers the public and private side of these women, and the their separate characters are described only in their gestures, relatively hidden from view.
A similar portrait was made for Marilyn Monroe, titled Untitled #983, Mary Marilyn and Norma Jean. This piece turns the iconic superstar into the mythic mother of God. Coyne told Ann Wilson Lloyd of the New York Times that the piece had “less to do with faith and more to do with humanity and being female in the world.” The figures, dissected by walls, certainly suggest the dichotomy of two worlds, and we can play with what these worlds are—private and public, protected and exposed, individual and stereotypical, sacred and secular.
Petah Coyne plays with perception and reality in her work. The reality is in the absolute presence of the sculptures. Perception is what the viewer brings to the works and reads into all of the symbols interlaced by the artist: birds, feathers, roses, candles, chain-link fence, chicken wire, wax, candles, hair, saints, nuns, monks, cocoons and webs. The real woman is in the strength; the perception is in how she is adorned. Embracing it all allows you to fall in love.
The exhibition at the Albright-Knox is paired with a small show of photography by the artist in the Collector’s Gallery, where the pieces may be purchased, through September 17.
|
Issue Navigation> Issue Index > v5n32: Byron Brown on the Casino Deal (8/10/06) > Falling in Love This Week's Issue • Artvoice Daily • Events Calendar • Classifieds |
Artvoice Blog Headlines
Who Goes Where When Hillary Goes to State?posted November 19, 11:04 am on Artvoice DailyCity Hall News has flow_chart that tracks who might replace who, from Hillary’s Senate seat on down (click to expand or follow the link—it’s an awkward shape): |
It’s Robert Rich Sr. All High Stadiumposted November 14, 4:05 pm on Artvoice DailyThese new signs properly label the structure. We’ve been reading recent stories in the Buffalo News about sportswriter Tom Borrelli’s terrible fall last week at the old All High Stadium. He’s currently battling life-threatening injuries... (more) |
CWM Fined for Violationsposted November 14, 1:41 pm on Artvoice DailyThis week Chemical Waste Management was fined $175,000 by the New York State Department of Environmental Conservation for violating its permits and the state’s hazardous waste laws. I don’t have much to say about that, except it doesn’t seem to me like too much money... (more) |
Musical Chairsposted November 14, 11:51 am on Artvoice DailyThe AP reports that Hillary Clinton met with Barack Obama in Chicago yesterday, adding fuel to speculation that she might be Obama’s choice for secretary of state. If that happens, it has long been rumored that Brian Higgins would be appointed to her Senate seat... (more) |
Paint the Townposted November 14, 10:06 am on Artvoice DailyLate last night, at the tail end of one of the few weeks in the past year in which we did not publish anything snarky about anybody, someone threw two gallons of paint on our front doors. Seems a waste; we hadn’t even earned it. Nonetheless, we were cleaning up all morning... (more) |
Old Editions Book Shopposted November 13, 12:58 pm on Artvoice DailyAV videographer Matt Quinn tours Old Editions, an often overlooked treasure at the corner of Oak and Huron Streets downtown: show enclosure (video/x-flv; 21.29 MB) |
This Is Not Today’s Newsposted November 12, 8:37 am on Artvoice DailyBut it would be nice if it were. Via the Data Stream, by way of Jon Winet. |
This Just In…posted November 11, 2:28 pm on Artvoice DailyAlways in the vanguard, researchers of the University at Buffalo’s Center of Human Capital have reached a bold conclusion, according to a statement disseminated this afternoon: Although no official determination has been made about whether New York State or the U... (more) |
Silver Lining: Edwards Remains a Good Guyposted November 11, 10:17 am on Artvoice DailyMarshawn Lynch Amid the anguished finger-pointing, plaintive wailing and resigned head-shaking sweeping the region following the Buffalo Bills’ third straight defeat, Season Ticket would like to apportion a minute sliver of credit. Quarterback Trent Edwards, by most quantitative and qualitative standards, failed miserably at New England on Sunday (not coincidentally, this was also his third consecutive regressive outing)... (more) |
Mazzariello’s Ristorante & Martini Barposted November 7, 3:30 pm on Chew on ThisPhoto taken by Rose Mattrey From Antipasti to Primi to Secondi, Mazzariello’s (114 Bloomfield Ave, Lancaster, 206.0561) has conquered the map of Italian cooking. Your palate will be exposed to an array of spices, herbs, and ingredients indigenous to Northern & Southern Italy... (more) |
Post Election Bits & Bytesposted November 6, 11:02 pm on Tech VoiceElection ‘08 is now in the history books - so I figured it’s time to take a look backward, and a look forward at some relevant headlines. Hacking Democracy First, we’ll take a look at one of the best kept secrets of the campaign season, from both sides, care of a Newsweek article published just today... (more) |
BNMC Open Meeting Tonightposted November 6, 12:19 pm on Artvoice DailyTonight at 6pm in the auditorium of the downtown library, everyone is invited to attend a public hearing on the Buffalo-Niagara Medical Campus—North End Projects. Among the projects planned are a 300,000 square foot Medical Office Building to be owned and operated by Ciminelli Development Company, Inc... (more) |
That Pigeon Won’t Flyposted November 6, 9:05 am on Artvoice DailySteve Pigeon Here’s another example, this one two years old, of the way Steve Pigeon’s political committees are alleged to steer money to candidates illegally. On September 15, 2006, the Pigeon-controlled PAC Citizens for Fiscal Integrity paid “RUR Strategy Group” $9,000 in consulting fees, according to CFI’s campaign finance disclosure forms... (more) |
SeaBar’s Social Calendarposted November 5, 11:44 am on Chew on ThisSeaBar will host live jazz and sushi nights starting Friday, November 21st at 8 p.m. (5235 Main Street, Wmsvl, 204.5283). A Cave Springs Riesling Tasting Event will take place at SeaBar’s suburban location on Wednesday, November 9th at 7 p.m... (more) |
Artvoice TV: Latest Additions » more on AVTV
Twilightposted November 19, 1:09 pm on channel Movie Trailers
|
The Boy in the Striped Pajamasposted November 19, 1:06 pm on channel Movie Trailers
|
Avi Takes Artvoice Shopping for the holidays @ Lexington food Co-opposted November 19, 11:52 am on channel Food
|
TRAIN DAY! @ the Buffalo Historical Societyposted November 17, 3:07 pm on channel Local Interest
|
Mass Appeal: Elmwood Fashion Eventposted November 15, 10:19 pm on channel Events
|
Buffalo Contemporay Danceposted November 15, 6:43 pm on channel Events
|
Old Editions Book Shopposted November 13, 11:42 am on channel Local Interest
|
Off Stage: Conversations with Anthony Chaseposted November 12, 4:50 pm on channel Theater
|
Happy Go Luckyposted November 12, 2:08 pm on channel Movie Trailers
|
Quantum of Solaceposted November 12, 2:01 pm on channel Movie Trailers
|
Flash Party at Essex St.posted November 9, 10:59 am on channel Events
|
Lakeview Effect at Nietzsche'sposted November 8, 4:54 pm on channel Music
|
Flatbed at Allen St. Hardwareposted November 8, 2:28 pm on channel Music
|
Obama's Nightposted November 6, 3:13 pm on channel Politics
|
Election Day: Douglas County Staging Location Oneposted November 6, 10:59 am on channel Election 08
|







Subscribe