Sometimes art makes us uncomfortable, or rather it should
make us uncomfortable. I recognize that this flies in the face of popular
concepts of art consumption. When many people consider “decorating” their homes
with art they gravitate toward the tranquil, peaceful, and beautiful. If the
work matches the sofa all the better. I have no problem with considerations of
color palette. The work in my living room actually matches the furniture, too.
We are bound to be attracted to specific color combinations. That, however, is
not my main point.
There is a time and place for beauty, but that is not the
only purpose of art in the twenty-first century. Art has a forcefulness to it
and to neglect that power is to push it into the background—to make it
wallpaper. Some art, even that placed in the sanctuaries of our homes, should
cause us to pause and consider the deeper aspects of life.
With all this in mind, I recently obtained several sets of
antique doll eyes (pictured here). These are the type of eyes that close when
Betsy Wetsy is placed on her back for naptime. The lead weights dangling from
the bottom of the pairs of eyes causes them to pivot inside a doll’s head. The
first time I came across some of these was at a summer art workshop. A friend
had some reserved for an assemblage project. I was fascinated at once.
They are creepy. I will not deny that. Any time we find eyes
loosely roaming outside of a head it is creepy. The fact that some of these
sets are missing one eye and that I have other eyeballs rolling around that are
not even connected to these sets makes them even creepier. I purposely
photographed them on the crushed red velvet because it adds a bloody element
that is even more disturbing. Maybe not what you want to see when you first
awake in the morning, but the unsettling quality can be beneficial.
The idea of using these eyes has been gestating within me
for about six years. Even before I purchased some of them I was writing notes
about their “artful purpose” within my sketchbooks. Once I had them in hand I
started making sketches for the altarpiece construction for which I envisioned
them. A few days after I made these initial sketches I found some old notes in
another place in my sketchbook and found that the combination of objects and
imagery I had been sketching was something I had already been thinking about
much earlier, though I had forgotten.
As is normal for postings like this, I’m not going to
divulge too much more information about what I plan to do. However, I am going to
share that these eyes will be used alongside a type of book page—a form of
text—that I have not previously utilized. Gospel pages from a Braille Bible.
Okay, now I’m ruining the suspense. Keep checking back for future details.
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