Karen Finley.KIM LIGHT GALLERY Karen Finley's exhibition "St. Kilda" presented an assortment of works that dealt with bereavement Bereavement Definition Bereavement refers to the period of mourning and grief following the death of a beloved person or animal. The English word bereavement and the regressive, helpless condition it can reduce us to. In Written in Sand, 1992-94, a memorial installation first shown at HallWalls in Buffalo, ten tons of damp sand were deposited in a dim, glided room, and the sand hillocks that formed were topped with flickering white votiv candles. A handwritten hand·write tr.v. hand·wrote , hand·writ·ten , hand·writ·ing, hand·writes To write by hand. [Back-formation from handwritten.] Adj. 1. text on the wall invited you to "write the names of thos you have loved and lost" in the sand and then to smooth them away. The main gallery contained nine framed pieces that resembled giant get-well cards. Featuring expressionistic images of floral arrangements, some with wilte or toppled blossoms, these works sported short, hand-painted texts. (The childlike handwriting used throughout the show looked by turns careful, furious pathetic, and scared.) With phrases such as "I shot myself because I love you i I loved myself I'd be shooting you," Finley expressed her interest in discussin the horrors of family dysfunction. Isolated in a tiny, atticlike room, The Vacant Chair, 1994, was perhaps the show's most evocative piece. Woven of flowers and branches, at once alive and moribund, surrounded by funereal fu·ne·re·al adj. 1. Of or relating to a funeral. 2. Appropriate for or suggestive of a funeral; mournful: funereal gloom. smells of drying foliage and shriveling petals this chair was a haunting sight. The seat back fanned out in spindly spin·dly adj. spin·dli·er, spin·dli·est Slender and elongated, especially in a way that suggests weakness. spindly Adjective [-dlier, -dliest , twisting branch tips that evoked skeleton fingers or some tree sprite's hair standing on end. Another room contained three mixed-media works based on dollhouses, nine small, quirky ink drawings, and three murallike tablecloth pieces. The texts on the dollhouses and tableclothes ranged from outcries ("please no, wake up, wake up" to acknowledgments of family pathology ("Heart disease runs in some families, not in mine. Depression, mania and too brief lives") to poetic musings ("Time and emotions stood still in their intensity like a floodgate . . ."). One tablecloth piece, Positive Attitude, 1994, was a simplistic sim·plism n. The tendency to oversimplify an issue or a problem by ignoring complexities or complications. [French simplisme, from simple, simple, from Old French; see simple drawing of a haloed man, woman, and child naked and covered with scarlet spots. The text focused on the desire to view the red lesions of Kaposi's sarcoma Kaposi's sarcoma (käp`əshē', kəpō`sē), a usually fatal cancer that was considered rare until its appearance in AIDS patients. as somehow lovely: "I tell myself I am visited by raspberries, strawberries, roses . . . I'm a speckled speck·led adj. 1. Dotted or covered with speckles, especially flecked with small spots of contrasting color. 2. Of a mixed character; motley. Adj. 1. wild cat with a coat of rare beauty." This piece was at once bold, noble, and embarrassing, and left one with conflicting feelings. The attempt to dispel stigma, to provide comfort, and to remind us of the holiness of sufferin radiated so strongly from Positive Attitude that while it seemed unfair to view it as a heavy-handed stab at prettifying a terrifying ter·ri·fy tr.v. ter·ri·fied, ter·ri·fy·ing, ter·ri·fies 1. To fill with terror; make deeply afraid. See Synonyms at frighten. 2. To menace or threaten; intimidate. illness, it was difficult not to. That Finley's show presents a grief-response which looks and feels childlike and regressive has interesting and moving aspects as well as troublesome ones. |
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