Tuesday, March 9, 2010

The power that lies within...

Pandora's Box is an exhibit of feminist art. Not all artists are self proclaimed feminists, and many have reservations about using this term, which is understandable considering the baggage that tends to follow it's use around. But none the less, the artists, and their art are reflecting on issues that are pertinent to feminist discourse. The uniqueness of this exhibit lies in its ability to create a safe space for the expression of this discourse through a medium that in its essence makes explicit the connection between the personal and the political.

These women are writing and rewriting themselves with their art, a practice that has been historically denied to women (particularly women of color). Many women (including myself) feel resistant to engaging in such a practice as we have been denied the belief that we have (or should have) the power and agency to conceive of our sexual, gender, and racial identities in a way that is different from the ones that have been forced upon us by the structure and forces of patriarchy.

The way in which i think about my own personal power is similar to the way i think about my personal creativity. The power and the creativity are both there inside, in abundance. The world is scared that i use these two things, especially together. The powers that be reinforce the notions that i don't have power and that i am not creative, and i have come to believe both of these things. We all have the power to create (in fact we are always recreating the world around us), our power comes from our ability to understand that power and creativity are the same. This awareness can bring us to a place where we consciously create. By rejecting myths about femininity and sexuality we are creating and recreating. Rediscovering the agency that i have to reject and critique the stereotypes and myths about who i am is not an easy task, but it has to start somewhere. I believe that Pandora's Box is but one space that provides an opportunity for women and men to tell new stories about ourselves. These stories have the power to not only transform ourselves, but those who come and bask in their creative power.

"By writing the self, woman will return to the body that has been confiscated from her, which has been turn to an uncanny stranger on display. Write yourself. Your body must be hear. Only then will the immense resources of the unconscious be heard"~ Helene Cixous

1 comment:

  1. It's amazing to hear that the exhibition provided a safe space for conversation, and that the works in the show were a catalyst for dialogue.

    I was glad to be part of the conversation that happened on Tuesday in the gallery. I was one of the many who were interviewed about my impressions of the exhibition, and the questions I was asked made me think of the show in a new way. While I think that artwork rarely makes change when it's sitting within a gallery, I know that the work has strong potential to ignite conversation. From a meaningful exchange of ideas, a transformation can occur which has the potential to ripple out and reach others. I think Tuesday was a perfect example of this.

    I want more of it!

    -Barb

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