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Ana Mendieta: Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Washington, DC.


At the conclusion of "Ana Mendieta Ana Mendieta (18 November 1948 – 8 September 1985) was a Cuban American artist famous for her performance art and video works.

Mendieta was born in Havana, Cuba but moved to the United States at a young age.
: Earth Body, Sculpture and Performance 1972-1985" was a small 1981 drawing in acrylic, Silueta de entranas (La voladora) (Silhouette of Entrails en·trails
pl.n.
The internal organs, especially the intestines; viscera.
 [The Flyer]). At first glance, the work was far from the most engaging or important in the show; indeed, here it seemed small and insignificant relative to many of Mendieta's other pieces, especially the massive, tree-trunk-like, untitled wooden sculptures from her "Totem Grove" series of a few years later, featured in an adjacent gallery. But the drawing's morbid title and jagged-edged figure, limned by a curvilinear curvilinear

a line appearing as a curve; nonlinear.


curvilinear regression
see curvilinear regression.
 outline that evokes ghosts or mummies, provided a smart rhetorical device Noun 1. rhetorical device - a use of language that creates a literary effect (but often without regard for literal significance)
rhetoric - study of the technique and rules for using language effectively (especially in public speaking)
, a purposeful grammatical slip, an ellipsis A three-dot symbol used to show an incomplete statement. Ellipses are used in on-screen menus to convey that there is more to come.  at the end of the exhibition instead of the period one expected. By apparently shunning proper curatorial grammar, curator Olga M. Viso made clear the subtle premises of Mendieta's work: No piece is an end in itself; each is part of a larger whole; the larger whole is incomplete; this incompletion is not the result of death (Mendieta's untimely demise in 1985 too often shadows any discussion of her oeuvre) but the condition of the work's being; and this ontology ontology: see metaphysics.
ontology

Theory of being as such. It was originally called “first philosophy” by Aristotle. In the 18th century Christian Wolff contrasted ontology, or general metaphysics, with special metaphysical theories
 is synonymous with synonymous with
adjective equivalent to, the same as, identical to, similar to, identified with, equal to, tantamount to, interchangeable with, one and the same as
 the morphology of the artist's body.

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During the thirteen years spanned by this exhibition of more than one hundred and fifty works (including photographs, drawings, films, slides, and sculptures), Mendieta's art always directed attention back to her body, whether she was physically present in the final image or not. In the former category is the artist's self-pronounced "first" entry in her signature "Silueta" (Silhouette) series, Imagen de Yagul (Image from Yagul), 1973, a color photograph in which she lies naked in a pre-Hispanic tomb at the Mesoamerican site of Yagul in Mexico, her face and most of her supine body shrouded by strategically placed sprigs of delicate white flowers. In the latter category are the hundreds of works in which a silhouette-like imprint of her body has been "inserted" (Viso's term for Mendieta's physical interactions with the earth) into a variety of natural settings or materials--pressed into grass in an Iowa field, etched into a tiny leaf, or carved into rock in her native Cuba (Esculturas rupestres [Rupestrian Sculptures], 1981). This exhibition's wall texts and catalogue essays reiterated the commonly heard mantra, one initiated by the artist herself, summarizing the inspiration for this work: that her bodily "interventions in the landscape," to use Viso's phrase, were metaphorical attempts to reunite with the land from which she had been displaced. The biographical facts are that Mendieta and her older sister were sent by their parents to the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  from Cuba in a 1961 Operation Pedro Pan airlift. She was allowed to return only after nineteen years in exile, the first five of which were spent in Iowa foster homes (her mother and younger brother Wiki is aware of the following uses of "'Younger Brother":
  • Younger Brother (music group)
  • Younger Brother (Trinity House) - a title within the British organisation, Trinity House
 came to America in 1966; her father, imprisoned im·pris·on  
tr.v. im·pris·oned, im·pris·on·ing, im·pris·ons
To put in or as if in prison; confine.



[Middle English emprisonen, from Old French emprisoner : en-
 in Cuba for his political activities, arrived only in 1979).

In featuring many of Mendieta's "silhouettes," of course, the exhibition also suggested a number of ties to other themes, including feminism (goddess culture in particular) and non-Anglo-Saxon cultural traditions (including Afro-Cuban), as well as to art-historical movements such as Conceptual, Land, and performance art. But the real surprise in the show was the curatorial emphasis on Mendieta's graduate years at the University of Iowa Not to be confused with Iowa State University.
The first faculty offered instruction at the University in March 1855 to students in the Old Mechanics Building, situated where Seashore Hall is now. In September 1855, the student body numbered 124, of which, 41 were women.
 in the 1970s, particularly the period between her first master's degree (in painting, 1972) and her second (in mixed media, 1977). During nearly half of the period covered by the exhibition, in other words Adv. 1. in other words - otherwise stated; "in other words, we are broke"
put differently
, Mendieta was officially a graduate student, and roughly a third of the items on view were produced during this time. Once one reaches the end of the show, however, the significance ascribed to these student years makes perfect sense, since it was during that innovative phase that she laid the foundation of her work, in terms of media (body, blood, gunpowder, in addition to film, paint, and traditional drawing materials), approach (live performance), and concept (the insertion and/or intervention of her body in the landscape).

Significantly, the "backbone" of the mixed-media graduate curriculum at the University of Iowa was Hans Breder's famed Intermedia Intermedia - A hypertext system developed by a research group at IRIS (Brown University).  Program, where Mendieta was exposed to the Viennese Actionists (Breder had brought photo documentation of their work from Germany) as well as to a stream of visiting artists and writers, including Willoughby Sharp, Vito Acconci, Lucy Lippard, Lynda Benglis, Luis Camnitzer, Mary Beth Edelson, and Liliana Porter. Additionally, and just as important, Breder taught his students to follow a tripartite process when working: formulate a proposal, execute it, and document it. Through both aspects of the program, Mendieta was introduced to work foregrounding the notion of incompleteness, which she achieved in her own practice mainly by documenting performances in photographs and films. While a commonplace today, in the mid-'70s the idea that material documentation was as important as live performance was relatively new and just beginning to overturn the myth that performed works were only "about the moment." It had been artists during the 1960s who first recognized that from the moment they stepped in front of an audience--even if that audience consisted only of a camera--their actions did not represent discrete works but rather carried equal weight, albeit distributed differently, with their representation and circulation in the photography, film, or video that carried the actions into the future. These documents were part and parcel of the enacted work, both assuring that their story stayed open to interpretation and largely preserving the tactile or haptic haptic /hap·tic/ (hap´tik) tactile.

hap·tic
adj.
Of or relating to the sense of touch; tactile.



haptic

tactile.
 quality of the originating actions.

Mendieta adopted this premise with vigor, making thousands of slides, close to eighty Super-8 films, and seemingly countless photographs of her performances. Sometimes the slides and negatives were printed; often they were not. Either way, their very existence insists that Mendieta's work, in all its apparent ephemerality, was then, is now, and forevermore for·ev·er·more  
adv.
Forever.

Adv. 1. forevermore - at any future time; in the future; "lead a blameless life evermore"
evermore
 will be incomplete and, therefore, tactile in sensibility. If the tactility of the objects on display in the exhibition did not immediately register with viewers (for its apprehension takes time), reading Chrissie Iles's excellent catalogue essay on Mendieta's films should prompt subsequent reflection on the importance of this sensation. Iles points out the intensely textured quality of the films, going so far as to liken lik·en  
tr.v. lik·ened, lik·en·ing, lik·ens
To see, mention, or show as similar; compare.



[Middle English liknen, from like, similar; see like2
 them to "celluloid cast[s] of Mendieta's presence." The exhibition's installation also supported this reading, as many of Mendieta's films (eleven were featured) were shown continuously, each one placed strategically in a room alongside related yet static works. On one wall, for example, one could watch Sweating Blood, 1973, in which Mendieta stares ahead, unflinching, as blood that had been applied to her hairline hair·line
n.
The outline of the growth of hair on the head, especially across the front.
 begins slowly to drip down her brow. Nearby was a series of photographs, Untitled (Facial Cosmetic Variations), 1972, in which Mendieta seems to presage Cindy Sherman's Untitled Film Stills, 1977-80, distorting her face with heavy makeup, wigs, and torn nylons pulled over her head. Documents displayed in a nearby vitrine established ties to other artists such as Robert Smithson, whose 1969 Artforum article on his Yucatan mirror displacements lay open, featuring a claim Mendieta easily could have made about her own work: "The displacement was in the ground, not on it."

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The overwhelming moments I ultimately experienced with the "Silueta" series here, however, led me to a disheartening dis·heart·en  
tr.v. dis·heart·ened, dis·heart·en·ing, dis·heart·ens
To shake or destroy the courage or resolution of; dispirit. See Synonyms at discourage.
 conclusion regarding her later work: By the time Mendieta's life ended, she was drawing on a personal image bank that was just about dry. The permutations of anthropomorphic Having the characteristics of a human being. For example, an anthropomorphic robot has a head, arms and legs.  shapes began to blur in my mind, despite, or perhaps because of, the variation of materials used. Those tree trunks from the "Totem Grove" series, for example, stood out as decorative, if not uncharacteristically zany. The sculptures, each standing between five and seven feet high with generic, bodylike images burned into them with gunpowder, seem to have come out of nowhere--or, rather, they emerged upright out of the customary horizontal orientation of Mendieta's previous work. (Even after the ninety-degree shift from floor to gallery wall, most of her early work implied an "originally" horizontal position horizontal position,
n a posture in which the body lies flat and the feet and head remain on the same level. Also called
supine.
). This unexpected and inexplicable verticality, along with the stylized styl·ize  
tr.v. styl·ized, styl·iz·ing, styl·iz·es
1. To restrict or make conform to a particular style.

2. To represent conventionally; conventionalize.
, graphic quality of the images, exuded an almost cartoonish quality here. And so the exhibition's pulselike power gave way to a flatline in this viewer's brain. More than one critic has remarked on the contrived appearance of Mendieta's later work, and Viso notes that the plethora of small drawings produced after 1981 represented the artist's attempt to make marketable works and secure gallery representation. Of course, economic issues are not always the cause of an artist's work turning stale, but they can certainly confuse direction and obfuscate To make unclear or confuse. See obfuscator and e-mail obfuscator.  new paths to pursue. However this personal observation is a negligible footnote in so many ways, not the least of which is that Mendieta continues to be an important beacon for emerging artists. Her work teaches artists to "fly" with their ideas, engage with their materials physically, and hold fast to the documentation that will evoke its tactile quality well after the performance--or the life--ends. This continuing influence provides one more sense in which Mendieta's work is incomplete, making Viso's risky choice of an "ending" for a retrospective that is indeed crucial for the artist's legacy all the more brilliant.

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Kathy O'Dell is Associate Dean of Arts and Sciences, University of Maryland, Baltimore University of Maryland, Baltimore, (also known as UMB) was founded in 1807. It is one of the oldest universities in the United States and comprises some of the oldest professional schools in the nation and world.  County. (See Contributors.)
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Author:O'Dell, Kathy
Publication:Artforum International
Date:Mar 1, 2005
Words:1550
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