Michele Blondel.FINE ARTS CENTER, UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS The system includes UMass Amherst, UMass Boston, UMass Dartmouth (affiliated with Cape Cod Community College), UMass Lowell, and the UMass Medical School. It also has an online school called UMassOnline. The 19 sculptures and installation pieces (ranging from 1986 to 1992) that comprised this exhibition reflected Michele Blondel's unique mixture of feminis Catholic liturgy and tongue-in-cheek humor. Its title, "Prelait-Point de Rosee-Lactaires Dilicieux" (Pre-milk [or prelate PRELATE. The name of an ecclesiastical officer. There are two orders of prelates; the first is composed of bishops, and the second, of abbots, generals of orders, deans, &c. ]-dewpoint-sweet milk cap), suggests a new mother's watery yellow "premilk" colostrum colostrum /co·los·trum/ (kol-os´trum) the thin, yellow, milky fluid secreted by the mammary gland a few days before or after parturition. co·los·trum n. , sweat, and the sperm-covered head of a penis. Indeed, breasts, penises, and body fluids are omnipresent in Blondel's elaborate assemblages, which feature hand-blown Baccarat glass phalluses and breasts, metal hardware, and found objects cum fetishes. An accompanying 45-minute performance Prelait, Point de Rosee, 1992, with Blondel, soprano Mossa Bildner, and bassist Frederick Williams further explored eroticism, spirituality, and ritual. The central large installation, Bene Pendantes (Well hung, 1990) consisted of 1 ornate velvet vestments (one for each apostle and one for Christ) suspended fro the ceiling on 7 double-edged steel lances above gold-framed mirrors in the shape of the Latin Cross. Four purple and red glass penises--only three of whic were accompanied by glass "testicles Testicles Also called testes or gonads, they are part of the male reproductive system, and are located beneath the penis in the scrotum. Mentioned in: Testicular Cancer, Testicular Surgery, Vasectomy "--were carefully placed on four mirrors. This comic piece referred to the actual practice of looking up a papal candidate's chasuble with mirrors to check to see that he is a properly equippe male. The title refers both to the suspended priests' garments and the priests' undefiled, unused "glass" balls. Everywhere the sacrosanct was undercut by sometimes hilarious, pornographic, or absurd imagery--especially in Blondel's blasphemous performance, which parodied the rituals of the Mass, sexual foreplay foreplay /fore·play/ (for´pla) the sexually stimulating play preceding intercourse. fore·play n. The sexual stimulation that precedes intercourse. , and intercourse. In Prelait, Point de Rosee, Blondel manipulated foodstuffs foodstuffs npl → comestibles mpl foodstuffs npl → denrées fpl alimentaires foodstuffs food npl → accompanied by a performance of her 1988 poem "Recueil des mots de ma Langue langue n. Language viewed as a system including vocabulary, grammar, and pronunciation of a particular community. [French, from Old French; see language.] " (The harvest of the words of my tongue) which had been set to improvisational music. The long, scurrilous poem was sung by Bildner as if she were performing a Wagnerian opera. Outfitted in a black an white nun's habit designed by Karl Lagerfeld, Blondel began by standing on a wooden prayer stool and dripping large globs of sticky maple syrup down the top of framed Plexiglas canvases into aluminum gutters lined with goose down. With surgeon's accuracy, she took a sharp knife and removed skin from a raw chicken, sewing the skins into prophylactics that she placed on top of two Baccarat crystal forms that resembled circumcised penises. After donning diaphanous ruffled gloves, Blondel fashioned a flour vagina and poured a sticky white substance into it. Adding milk to her "sacred" dough, she placed it and the skins in a metal pot, removed her gloves, and eviscerated three raw mackerel. Blondel's erotic probing of the bloody open slits in the fish was followed by meticulous stitching up. Blondel cut off the heads of the fish, sectioned them, and placed pieces inside a symbolic loaf of bread. These sandwiches were offere to the audience as one would offer communion wafers to a congregation. The Christian symbols of fish, bread, and blood were interwoven in·ter·weave v. in·ter·wove , in·ter·wo·ven , inter·weav·ing, inter·weaves v.tr. 1. To weave together. 2. To blend together; intermix. v.intr. with sexually suggestive skins, liquids, and viscera viscera /vis·ce·ra/ (vis´er-ah) plural of viscus. vis·cer·a pl.n. 1. The soft internal organs of the body, especially those contained within the abdominal and thoracic cavities. . In the end, Blondel's obsessive manipulations of the links between the sacred and the profane separate this hig priestess from artists such as Kiki Smith who have also sought to probe our corporeal unconscious. |
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