Wednesday, June 1, 2016
Thursday, October 8, 2015
Wednesday, October 7, 2015
DOROTHY NETHERLAND's Growing Pains – Essay by Wim Roefs
Dorothy
Netherland’s Growing Pains
By
Wim Roefs
In her studio, Dorothy Netherland has been listening lately to Lana Del
Rey’s music, getting addicted a bit to some of the songs. Part of the “fucked my way up to
the top” singer’s persona
relates to Netherland’s art. Del Rey’s references to 1950s and 1960s American
pop culture tap a source also crucial to Netherland’s earlier work. The
singer’s changing looks and outfits relate to Netherland’s current exhibition, PolyVores, a title that refers to the
way girls, young women and wannabe fashion designers create and accessorize
outfits on the website polyvore.com. Netherland’s 13-year-old daughter Izzy is
among the “polyvores” engaged in virtual-paper-doll play and sharing their
ensembles on the site with similarly inclined fashionistas.
But
then there’s 30-year-old Del Rey’s darker side, which feeds into Netherland’s
anxiety about young girls growing up these days, the focus of her new work. The
singer whines to a journalist about wanting to die, then complains about him
writing that down. She sings about screwing one biker after another, coyly
suggesting in interviews that it could, perhaps, be autobiographical. She tried
to sleep her way to the top, she brags, and is annoyed that it didn’t work. The singer,
Netherland says, “is either trying
to be provocative, selling a brand that's beautiful and wild, using her
sexuality, while exploring a dark kind of freedom in the music and the things
she says, or she’s kind of an asshole.”
That
Del Rey – real name Elizabeth “Lizzy” Grant – is at best casual but more likely
callous or even hostile toward feminism enforces Netherland’s ambiguity about
the singer and her brand of seemingly strong, independent young womanhood.
“Personally, I hate it when young women say they aren't feminists, but I also
think that they can be whatever they want, act however they want, and be
unapologetic about it. They don't need our approval or protection.”
“Izzy
is getting older, fast, and I'm excited for her, but scared, too. And I can
appreciate a young woman who is complex, dark, crazy, whatever it is. But it's
hard to admit that our own child will have to experience the pain of the world
in order to have that kind of freedom. I remember some of the things I did,
that I wouldn't like to imagine her doing. I guess what I mean is that it’s
hard to let go of control and trust you've done a good enough job.”
Growing
up and the impact of parents, general upbringing and the culture at large,
especially its effect on young women, have
been the focus of Netherland’s work for 15 years. Drawing heavily from imagery
in 1950s and 1960s women’s magazines, she initially explored her own coming of
age and the way skewed recollections of personal history inform a sense of
self. Through observations of domesticity and family drama, she created
complex, intricate tableaux that
combine suggestions of household bliss with stronger suggestions of discomfort
and anxiety. While social commentary was not her intent, Netherland has
maintained, the ironic statements were hard to miss.
Some
three years ago, Netherland turned the tables on herself, creating a shift in
mommy issues through two series of works, Femme Fatal and Velveteen, that focused on her then-10-year-old daughter’s
upbringing and Netherland’s own role in that. She was, and is, intrigued by the
“artifice and sexuality” related to “girl power” and the tension between real
and fake. In the work, the image of an unsettling young girl with exaggerated
features and out-of-control makeup physically and psychologically dominates the
scenes, center-stage but at odds with her surroundings. Adult women play second
string as they pester, fuss over and perhaps try to protect the girl. The
girl’s mouth and eyes are photos of daughter Izzy’s mouth and eyes.
The
PolyVores paintings have an entirely
different feel. Working from photos of her daughter posing just so and of
clothing in fashion magazines, Netherland creates collage-like paintings of
Izzy in different outfits. Gone is the menacing quality of the featured star in
Velveteen and Femme Fatal. The less generic girl based on Netherland’s daughter
from just below the shoulders up takes her place, as prominent but in sync with
her surroundings. Gone also are adult women floating around in the margins.
Instead, the girl is framed, even enveloped and sometimes obscured, by a dense
array of very colorful and very pretty flowers. The change in pallet from
understated-earthy to happy-bright adds to the shift from a darkish to an
upbeat, even joyful look.
It’s
deceptive. “Now this is girly art
with balls,” one of Netherland’s if ART Gallery colleagues observed
approvingly. The sheer beauty of the PolyVores
work disguises its disturbing undertones. Here are Izzy’s head and shoulders
attached to the bodies of glitzy fashion-magazine models expressly selected by
Netherland for their particular pose, suggestions of sexuality seldom far away.
“The figures in the paintings convey a lack of experience,”
Netherland says, “and their efforts at posing seem to convey an attempt at a
level of sophistication that should not be there yet. The clothing and wealth
of the model's bodies are at odds with the posed expressions of the young girl,
perhaps.”
What makes parents love their child competes here
with what worries them. There’s no suggestion that Izzy would try to sleep her
way to the top, but childlike innocence is offset by seductive poses and
blossoming sexuality, including glimpses of provocative nudity. There’s
endearment on the one hand, and allure, on the other. Disarming
self-consciousness and attitude. Sweetness and combative cool, possibly pre- or
post- rolling of the eyes. Insecurity and being oh so pleased. Carefree
happiness and affected boredom. Confidence and slyness. Little-girliness and coquettishness.
“It’s
not even the inherent sexuality that’s disturbing,” Netherland says. “It’s the
nod to money and the lack of originality. Adolescence is a confusing,
tumultuous time of discovering and exploring identity. To add these online
worlds to the mix could add more confusion. Consumerism, narcissism and fake
constructions – things they are growing up with these days that just seem
normal, the unnatural and artificial becoming natural. In
each piece, I include part of my daughter's shirt and shoulders, which gives a
cut-and-paste look to each figure and accentuates the performative and
constructed aspects of identity.”
Netherland
wonders.
Is
content becoming less important than packaging as girls’ lives increasingly
play out online?
Is
there room for real individuality or do we, especially young girls, merely
become brands?
How
much can you play with “persona” and remain authentic?
Is
the search for “likes” and “followers” replacing rebellion?
“Each
figure is surrounded by flowers that are drawn and then screenprinted
and painted onto Mylar, some of which I bake to make them curl. The fake,
blossom-filled background mirrors fabricated worlds created online and
refers to the traditional symbols for youth and feminine beauty. In a world
where, increasingly, emphasis is placed on the contrived surface, will our
presumably empowered girls grow up to embrace individuality and self-awareness,
or will they use their constructed identities to play the parts they are scripted
to play within the artifice?”
What
can’t be lost on Netherland is the irony of her expressing these anxieties
while turning her little girl into a child model, fashion plate, poser and
personal paper doll, starring in paintings and on gallery walls, exhibition
invitations and catalogue pages. Nevertheless, and despite PolyVores being an in-house case study, mother Dorothy seems to
have taken a step back as a coming-of-age variable in her daughter’s life,
focusing less on her own impact on Izzy growing up. Instead, artist and
observer Netherland trains her eye more exclusively on societal influences,
including those of social-media, on how her little girl might become a woman,
using the polyvore phenomenon as a lens to explore “the nature of self and
issues of cultural identity,” as Netherland puts it. But taking herself out of
the equation somewhat doesn’t eliminate her worries about “the conflicting
messages of girl power.”
Netherland
isn’t anti-social media or anti-girl power, she says. Nor does she think all
young girls are screwed up. She likes that contemporary culture tries to
empower them but worries about the expectations society has of young women. “I
just have questions about it all, and I revel in the
complexities of these issues.”
It didn’t disturb the artist when a friend
thought of the word “deflowering” in relation to the new work. Netherland
actually liked the association, indicating some level of ease on her part with
what will come. “Izzy will be deflowered, in all senses of the word, soon, and
she will need that girl power we talk about so much. I just don’t want my
daughter to feel like she has to fit into this all-powerful, money-driven,
approval-seeking mold. But there will be blood.”
Wim Roefs is the owner of if ART Gallery
Friday, August 8, 2014
ACROSS THE BOARD: NEW WORKS, August 8-30, 2014
To view works by artists in the exhibition click on their names: Ashlynn Browning, Beverly Buchanan, James Busby, Steven Chapp,Diane Kilgore-Condon, Jeff Donovan, Phil Garrett, Mary Gilkerson,Tonya Gregg, Leslie Hinton, Sjaak Korsten, Philip Morsberger, Dorothy Netherland, Anna Redwine, Edward Rice, Laura Spong, Tom Stanley,H. Brown Thornton, Leo Twiggs, Katie Walker and David Yaghjian
Friday, March 29, 2013
Saturday, November 24, 2012
DOROTHY NETHERLAND: Velveteen
For images of the new Velveteen and Violent Femme series, scroll down.
For images of other recent works, of which many will be in the exhibition, CLICK HERE.
For an ESSAY about the Velveteen exhibition, CLICK HERE.
For an ARTIST'S STATEMENT for Velveteen, CLICK HERE.
For installation shots of the exhibition CLICK HERE.
Velveteen 1, 2012, ink, acrylic, watercolor, watercolor ink, oil, screen print, ink transfer and photo transfer on glass and mylar, 20 x 16 in., $750 |
Velveteen 2, 2012, ink, acrylic, watercolor, watercolor ink, oil, screen print, ink transfer and photo transfer on glass and mylar, 20 x 16 in., $750 |
Velveteen 3, 2012, ink, acrylic, watercolor, watercolor ink, oil, screen print, ink transfer and photo transfer on glass and mylar, 20 x 16 in., $750 |
Velveteen 4, 2012, ink, acrylic, watercolor, watercolor ink, oil, screen print, ink transfer and photo transfer on glass and mylar, 20 x 16 in., $750 |
Violent Femme V, 2012, acrylic ink, watercolor
ink, watercolor, acrylic, oil, and photo transfer on glass and dura-lar, 16 x 12 in., $550 |
Violent Femme IV, 2012, acrylic ink, watercolor
ink, watercolor, acrylic, oil and photo transfer on glass and dura-lar, 16 x 12 in., $550 |
Violent Femme III, 2012, acrylic ink, watercolor
ink, watercolor, acrylic, oil and photo transfer on glass and dura-lar, 16 x 12 in., $550 |
Violent Femme II, 2012, acrylic ink, watercolor
ink, watercolor, acrylic, oil and photo transfer on glass and dura-lar, 16 x 12 in., $550 |
Violent Femme I, 2012, acrylic ink, watercolor
ink, watercolor, acrylic, oil and photo transfer on glass and dura-lar, 16 x 12 in., $550 |
Monday, October 22, 2012
18/100 Southern Artists The if ART Contingency, October 28- November 17, 2012
18/100 Southern Artists
The if ART Contingency
October 28 - November 17, 2012
@ if ART Gallery
1223 Lincoln St.
Columbia, SC
1 new book about Southern artists
100 artists in the book
18 of 100 artists from if ART Gallery
ARTISTS' RECEPTION & BOOK SIGNING
Sunday, October 28, 2 - 4 pm
To view works of art available at if ART Gallery featured in 100 Southern Artists CLICK HERE
For more information, contact Wim Roefs at if ART Gallery
(803) 238-2351/ wroefs@sc.rr.com
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