Ayae Takahashi: Bernard Toale Gallery. (Boston).Japanese-born, Boston-based artist Ayae Takahashi reads between the lines Between the lines can refer to:
n. pl. ges·soes 1. A preparation of plaster of Paris and glue used as a base for low relief or as a surface for painting. 2. A surface of gesso. grounds, Takahashi references historic Japanese ink scroll painting as well as contemporary manga imagery. Borrowing devices from Japanese theater and decorative design, she fabricates an open-ended and provocative oedipal oed·i·pal or Oed·i·pal adj. Of or characteristic of the Oedipus complex. tale of the complicated relationship between daughter and mother in the guise of Snow White and the queen. Here the handsome prince is absent, the dwarfs have become tiny masked putti put·ti n. Plural of putto. , and the moralizing mor·al·ize v. mor·al·ized, mor·al·iz·ing, mor·al·iz·es v.intr. To think about or express moral judgments or reflections. v.tr. 1. To interpret or explain the moral meaning of. has been suspended. As in Noh theater, the emphasis here is on suggestion, a kind of approximation of reality with gestures and masks as signs. Upending the usual reading of the fairy tale, Takahashi assigns the stepmother figure the role of victim or martyr by giving her the horned mask of a stag (a sacred animal in Shinto iconography), while raven-haired Snow White wears a wolf mask, traditionally signifying cunning, ferocity, and unpredictability. In Enciphered; Snow White #1, the stepmother appears almost like a figure in a bizarre Eden. Floating on a cloud, she holds an apple that sprouts from branches that grow from her mouth, and a tree snake wraps itself around her neck like a silk shawl. The second panel reinvents the magic-mirror scene as an S and M drama set in a landscape of 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. clouds and rolling cliffs. The queen, her head shrouded in what looks like a Buddhist demon cape, is transfixed by the vision of a seductive Snow White in a grotesquely baroque mirror. A rope looped around the two women's hips links them provocatively through the mirror. The queen grasps the deadly apple in her right hand and a paring knife in her left. A small gash in her leg and an open wound on Snow White's back, which she bares while smiling coyly over her shoulder, imply an element of mutual pain and pleasure. In the climactic panel Enciphered: Snow White #3, a monstrous three-limbed, multibreasted stepmother offers the poisoned apple to Snow White. Perched atop lotus flowers and accompanied by masked dwarfs, the two bear swords. Snow White holds the severed hand of her stepmother to her breast. In the final panel, a triumphant yet tearful princess in black high-heeled boots rides off on a toy white steed, cradling stag antlers antlers metaphorical decoration for deceived husband. [Western Folklore: Jobes, 395] See : Cuckoldry and a Noh mountain-witch mask on her lap; the implication is that the daughter has killed the mother to attain her own mature identity. In an eclectic weaving of style and signs, Takahashi reveals the figure of Snow White as an idiosyncratic id·i·o·syn·cra·sy n. pl. id·i·o·syn·cra·sies 1. A structural or behavioral characteristic peculiar to an individual or group. 2. A physiological or temperamental peculiarity. 3. doppelganger doppelgänger Psychiatry A delusion that a double of a person or place exists elsewhere; it is related to other defects in recognition and suggests organic disease in the nondominant parietal lobe. See Depersonalization disorder, Schizophrenia. : The carousel horse balances on the back of a preteen Takahashi in pigtails This article is about the hair style. For the connectors, see Optical fiber. Pigtails (also known as angel wings and bunches, or Twin Tail(ツインテール/TsuinTe-ru) in Japan. and a kimono. Takahashi's efforts to connect manga style with pictorial conventions of traditional Japanese art ally her loosely with the superflat art of Takashi Murakami and his Hiropon Factory. But unlike Murakami's workshop fabrications and computer-aided designs, Takahashi's delicately lined and shaded works are the product of laborious technique and psychoanalytic reflection. They are also far more personal and deeply thought-out hybrids of beauty and terror, in which there is no happy ending. |
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