Wednesday, June 3, 2009

The Book Borrowers, Exhibited at Bellevue Arts Museum

Call me a snob, I don't care--I love art museums. The curators get to choose the finest, most intriguing work, and they've done it again at the Bellevue Arts Museum. I've been wanting to see this one for a while. As one of the early "Altered Book" artists back in the 90's, this was intriguing to me.

Link to Book Borrowers Page

Larry and I talked it over after seeing the work, and we liked most of, but not all the same things. Something called a book excavation was interesting to me, related to, but a few steps beyond the well known book The Humument by Tom Phillips. It appears that the artist would take a book, (or three copies of the same book in one case), with illustrations, and page through the book, choosing which illustrations to retain and cut out around and feature, in one case, animals. Leaving words that relate to the pictures, the animal pictures are left in situ on the page, and most of the rest of the page is cut away. Page by page the artist goes through the book, excavating out the excess and leaving a sculptural collection of animals. Ah shoot--just go see it!

There were also stacks of books that had been sandblasted into various shapes, cutwork, altered, revised, upended, rolled into log like shapes that looked like a slice from a tree, book covers turned into lace paper, inked, and books that were merely the background for some fascinating machine puppet animal skeletons made from wire and string. Fascinating.

Lynette, the Flying Redhead.

Judy Hill at Bellevue Arts Museum

Judy Hill at the Bellevue Arts Museum

I was charmed by the vulnerability of these figures in glass and raku ceramics. I have no idea how she put these together, but as a person who has studied characters and really appreciates how clothing speaks about a person, this was a collection that awed me. Apparently these figures are autobiographical. For me it would take some time to figure out all that was being said by these rather blank faced, somewhat similarly posed people.

The docent and I had a conversation about it, and she pointed out that there was one male character, a baby, which seemed slightly bigger than the female adults. Interesting to find out that the artist had a male employer that treated her poorly for some time, and that was referenced by the collectors of these works.

Also interesting to note that the whole exhibit is the collection of one couple. Wouldn't it be nice to have such a patron? But more than that, to have someone who understands the work, encourages this expression, and appreciates the autobiography in visual form.

Larry and I went to see another exhibit, the reason we visited the museum, and I came away really glad we went while both were up.

Lynette, the Flying Redhead

Digital Collage -- Queen Elizabeth Smokes!

There was this picture with smoke and bubbles...and I tell ya, Queen Elizabeth just BELONGED there...if you know what I mean.

Digital Collage
By Lynette

Lynette Hensley
IS the Flying Redhead.

The Flying Redhead


I'm not the first Flying Redhead!

She's much braver than I--she actually flies!

Smilin atcha...
Lynette