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THE
VEIL
Mary Tuma - Artist of the Month
The Paltel Virtual Gallery at Birzeit University
Maymanah Farhat
July 2008
http://virtualgallery.birzeit.edu/community_artist_of_the_month?mart_id=374525
Since
1992, Palestinian-American artist Mary Tuma has been creating works that
address issues of the body, the spirit and identity. Tuma's work incorporates
the use of textiles, found objects and costume design in installation
works that are profoundly introspective; yet engage the viewer through
explorations of the human condition. Tuma's experimentation with installation
art began while receiving her MFA from the University of Arizona at Tucson
. She currently teaches art at the University of North Carolina at Charlotte
and has been exhibiting her work since 1993.
Tuma's
work conveys physical and spiritual transformations and is accompanied
by insights on mortality, traumatic life changes, and humanity. Through
such installation works as Dancing Girls, 1999, Passages, 2000, and Homes
for the Disembodied, Tuma articulates personal and communal journeys of
such issues.
Dancing
Girls by Mary Tuma.
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In
Dancing Girls Tuma examines changes in the body and how the spirit
transcends such experiences. The installation work consists of a series
of found tricycles hung with white string from the ceiling in a manner
that simulates an ascent into another spiritual realm. The tricycles
are hung so that their shadows reflect along the walls and floor of
the gallery space, evoking a sense of movement. In an artist's statement
that includes a discussion of the work, Tuma affirmed, "Dancing
Girls is about the transformation that the body goes through with
death and change. It is about a sort of out-of-body experience, a
shaman's travel into other worlds, and travel via our imaginations." |
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The
tricycles are covered by various materials such as fabric, fur and
lace, which give the transcendent journey an animated childlike
appearance. The inspiration for Dancing Girls came from Tuma's own
personal belief system and the role of Pre-Columbian Peruvian textiles
in shaman practices. Each tricycle appears as a new formation of
the body while the shadows seem spirit-like in nature, reflecting
physical courses of change. Tuma captivates the viewer with spirits
that travel towards transcendence through a cyclone of bodies in
transformation.
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Passages.
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With
Passages, Tuma creates a physical space of mourning that induces the
intense tragedy of those who have died from the violence that plagues
the Palestinian/Israeli conflict. Passages was made in November 2000
after the beginning of the Al Aqsa Intifada in Israel , the West Bank
and Gaza . During the second uprising, Tuma was inspired by news coverage
she received from Internet reports by those experiencing the conflict
firsthand. |
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installation work was first developed and shown in a space of five
hundred square feet at the Queens College Art Gallery in Charlotte
, North Carolina . Every inch of the five hundred square foot space
was transformed to create what appears to be a gathering of departed
souls, what Tuma describes as, "both a memorial to those who
lost their lives in this terrible conflict and a plea for a fair and
just resolution that recognizes international law and human rights."
The
walls of the space are covered by commercial clothing patterns.
With the outlines of the patterns, Tuma suggests the flattening
of bodies that remain faceless. These figures are unidentified yet
they cannot be ignored. By covering the walls of the space with
such patterns, Tuma implies, "the depersonalizing of the 'other'."
Just as the figures of the clothing patterns are two-dimensional,
Tuma affirms that the objectification of "the other" attempts
to strip a people or culture of its humanity. Tuma's subjects are
no longer tangible beings through such representation. The figures
are reduced to sterile outlines that await the manipulation of their
forms by a seamstress, or in this case the objectifier. By using
such representations, Tuma portrays the dehumanization of the Palestinian
people in media coverage of the Palestinian/Israeli conflict.
She
counters such objectification with excerpts of personal accounts
of the conflict that are written in charcoal and graphite. The passages
that record funeral processions, shootings and attacks are written
on the walls. One reoccurring quote reads, "
shot and
killed today by live ammunition to his head." The power of
such writings juxtaposed with Tuma's representation of objectification
impacts the viewer with severity. Tuma simultaneously calls attention
to the misconceptions of the political conflict while shedding light
on the catastrophic reality of life and death under occupation and
turmoil.
Wooden
cradles that lie within the center of the installation space further
articulate the reality of the conflict. The cradles are made from
branches and hang from the ceiling. Attached to each vessel are
small packages, which represent remains of personal stories and
the aspects of life that are left unresolved when one's life is
interrupted so abruptly. The cradles symbolize passages to the afterlife
yet appear anchored mid-journey by the fragments of unfinished personal
stories that weigh heavily on the spirit. Beneath the cradles are
solemn reds that are painted upon the entire floor of the installation
space. The various hues of red insinuate bloodshed and add to the
powerful impact of Tuma's memorial space. Through Passages, the
viewer is presented the tragic reality of a people whose existence
and fate is determined by the day-to-day outcomes of a violent political
conflict.
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Homes
for disembodied.
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The
difficult living conditions of the Israeli occupation of Palestine
are also conveyed in Tuma's installation piece, Homes for the Disembodied.
In Homes for the Disembodied Tuma folded fifty yards of black chiffon
to create five connected dresses, which can stand as tall as fifteen
feet high while covering a floor space of twenty-four feet. The dresses
are hung from wire forms at the neck and shoulders and are placed
in a line. Homes for the Disembodied exhibited in the Made in Palestine
exhibition, which has received critical acclaim since it's opening
in 2003 at the Station Museum in Houston , Texas and continues to
tour galleries and museums.
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| Tuma's
creation of five dresses from one large piece of chiffon is momentous
and communicates the collective adversity faced by the Palestinian
people. The installation work's presence is stoic yet the minimal
physical support of the black chiffon creates figures whose forms
are vulnerable to the space in which they are displayed. Such conflicting
physical elements of the piece suggest the difficulties faced by Palestinian
women living under Israeli occupation. They must remain strong, despite
the most harrowing conditions. Tuma describes the heroic scale of
the dresses as reflecting, "the strength and courage of Palestinian
women who must carry on in unjust circumstances they have little power
to change."
While
the monumental size and presence of the piece fascinates the viewer,
the delicate nature of the chiffon speaks of the fragile state of
lives that are at risk of being uprooted or taken at any given time
due to political turmoil. For Tuma, Homes for the Disembodied functions
as, "
both a memorial to and an offering for the people
displaced from Jerusalem who were unable to return to their homes
before their death
It is very much a spirit dwelling place-a
comfort zone for spirits without a home."
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Details
of clothing patterns.
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In
Dancing Girls, Passages and Homes for the Disembodied, Tuma enthralls
the viewer with journeys of the human form throughout emotional and
corporal experiences. Tuma does so by presenting some of the most
difficult conditions in which humanity is struggling to survive. Through
her work we are reminded of the delicate nature of life, and are provided
a greater understanding of the human condition. |
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