|
Women
first experience menstruation as an epiphany, much in the way a religious
innocent experiences stigmata: as confusing, bloody and transforming.
Sally
Curcio appropriates signs of authority: religious, materialist,
scientific, the erotic, and the museum space itself to create images and
objects that merge the legitimate and the marginal themes of femininity
and menstruation. This
appropriation seduces the viewer into transubstantiating the socially
marginalized content into innocent reflection and aesthetic pleasure.
Curcio renders these works using a variety of media: embroidery, painting,
drawing, and ready-made sculpture as well as an assortment of artistic
genres such as surrealism, medieval art, ready-made art, and pop art.
A charming and remarkable piece is “Milk
and Eggs” an assemblage that contains 8 Domes 5" x 4
3/4" (each). This work
harkens to 19th century museum dioramas as it leads us through
the domes in dream-like narrative about coming of age.
Curcio is her most iconoclastic when she juxtaposes the embroidered linen
piece “Gloves,” a diptych showing gloves with bloody holes in the
palms, with a diptych called “Undewear.”
Curcio is successful in descralizing blood and returning it to the
mundane. It is both humorous
and profound.
In
her piece the triptych “Doubting Thomas,” Curcio beautifully
embroiders a hand that is in the midst of an operation on its palm.
This image is framed on either side by smaller images of the palm
wound. The piece has all the
gore and sanctimoniousness of medieval paintings, while suggesting a
scientific solution to the crisis of doubt.
Curcio
has successfully, and with a convincing innocence, balanced the scales on
privileged and marginalized content in this body of work.
The intentional craftsman-like work and directiness of themes
succeeds in taking on substantial and incendiary social and philosophical
issues with a surprising lightness.
|