Acclaimed
multimedia artist Helène Aylon’s recent residency at the Virginia Center for
the Creative Arts marked a homecoming of sorts; Helène was last there 22
years ago working on a series of paintings. “When I got home after the
residency in 1993,” Helène says. “I never looked at them again. They were in
cartons hidden away, and now I’ve come back with them. I am seeing how I was in
those days, these panels, these garlands, are remembered from a long time ago,
but they’re also elegiac: things gone by. I’m making an arc of my life at the
end of my life. I’ve come full circle with the process art, and it’s happening
at VCCA.”
These paintings
feature fragile leaves, pods and blades of grass strewn across a field of what
looks like eddying vapor or liquid. Helène used brewed coffee as her
medium; its faint aroma still hovers over the canvases.
Born into an ultra
orthodox Jewish family in Borough Park, Brooklyn, New York, Helène
married a Talmudic scholar/rabbi at the age of 18. Widowed at 30 with two
young children and armed with an arts degree from Brooklyn College, Helène
underwent a remarkable transformation that would find her living in
Berkeley in the 1970s, teaching at San Francisco State and forging a prominent
art career.
Helène, who is 84,
is one of the foremost artists of the eco-feminist art movement, which links
feminism and nature. She is to receive a Lifetime Achievement and
President’s Art & Activism Award from the Women’s Caucus for
Art at the National Museum of Women in the Arts in Washington, D.C.
on February 4, 2016 (her 85th birthday). Two days later, she
will be screening her Bridge of Knots video (with sound
by Meredith Monk) and will also be participating in a panel at
American University in Washington during the College Art Association
conference.
Her
series Paintings That Change, produced between 1974 and 1977,
featured linseed oil “formations” on paper. The natural quality of the oil
and the organic shapes it formed appealed to Helène as did the chance
and change involved. It was the perfect match for an artist whose own life
had been marked by seismic shifts.
In
1978, Helène began work on a series called The
Breakings, pouring linseed oil in a puddle on a surface, allowing a skin
to form on top of the oil and then tilting the works up from the floor. The wet
oil would press against the outer skin, causing it to break. “I would wait
months for a skin to form—very much like a gestation. The formations looked
like tree trunks and torsos—it was all mixed together: a women’s body and the
body of the land. Eventually, I would announce that I was going to make
a Breaking and invite people to witness it. It was like a birthing:
the sac that held the oil would inevitably break and the oil would gush out
like an amniotic sac bursting. It was orgasmic too. It was about a release. It
is indicative of the visceral, birthing body, as opposed to the
Playboy body that dominates our culture. ”“I would say to
the “midwives": ‘whatever is contained must be released. You are
going to initiate a Breaking, and I am going to receive it.’ So, I was going to
accept it no matter what. Whatever happens. I was not in charge in a sense. It
was a different kind of an attitude; I never wanted to make my mark
particularly in the art. I wanted it to tell me something, rather than me
telling it something. I wanted to learn something deeper from the art. Because
I felt abstract art after Rothko did his great work, I felt it was arbitrary.
It didn’t matter if you put yellow in the corner, or purple in the corner. So I
wanted something natural to happen to inform it.” The Breakings were
shown and performed at 112 Workshop (now White Columns), and documented for the
Whitney’s American Century exhibition in 2000.
In
1980, Helène heard Australian physician, author, and
anti-nuclear advocate Helen Caldicott speak: “She said wherever you are in
your life, try to imagine doing something for disarmament. Suddenly, I just
felt: Goodbye studio, I’m going to do something.”
Helène closed her
studio and converted a used U-Haul truck into an Earth Ambulance. She
drove the ambulance to 12 Military S.A.C. (Strategic Air Command) sites across
the country and eventually the United Nations in New York during the
Second Special Session on Nuclear Disarmament on June 12,
1982, to “rescue” the earth. She collected pillowcases from women who
had written their dreams and nightmares about nuclear war on them, filling them
with earth. She selected pillowcases because they’re sacks and so reference the
S.A.C. sites. Pillowcases are also very intimate items that we use at our most
vulnerable, and Helène wanted to play upon the image of fleeing refugees, their
possessions carried in a pillowcase. Later on Helène took the
pillowcases and knotting them together into long ropes of linen, she hung them
across various museum façades. The Bridge of Knots, as the
piece was called, was installed at the Knoxville Museum of Art
(1993) Berkeley Art Museum (1995) and American University Museum
(2006). Earth Ambulance was shown at Creative Time at the Brooklyn
Bridge Anchorage in 1992.
In 1985, to mark
the 40th anniversary of the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, Helène
went to Japan. She made two large “sacs”, representing the two cities. She
asked students to put some kind of substance from the earth inside them, and
they filled them with seeds, grain, pods and bamboo. The sacs were
launched onto rivers where they floated towards Hiroshima and Nagasaki. In
1995, on the 50th anniversary of the bombing, Helène’s
video two sacs en route (i.e. to Hiroshima and
Nagasaki) was projected on the Sony Jumbotron in Times Square Helène was particularly
pleased that the screen looked directly down on the U.S. Armed Forces
recruitment kiosk.
In the
1990s, Helène turned her attention to God with The G-d Project,
which spanned two decades and is comprised of nine parts. “I decided I was
going to liberate God from the patriarchal misogyny and brutality imposed by
man projected onto G-d. With The Liberation of G-d, I planned to
go through every single page of the Old Testament, cover it respectfully with
transparent parchment and then highlight in pink marker all the parts that
revealed this. It was a very big thing; it took six years. Called The Book
that Will not Close on account of all the inserted protective parchment,
it was shown at The Jewish Museum in New York where it received both hate mail
and love letters.” Helène wrote G-d using a dash, in a nod to
her orthodox background where she was taught never to use the name of God
in vain. Helène’s dashes are always written in a subversive, pro-female hot
pink inserting a female presence in the name of God.
Helène’s
photographic series, Wrestlers documents her going out into the
landscape to search for the echoes of foremothers that have disappeared: “I
never heard about them. When I imagine Eden, I imagine a female space
where foremothers are named and regarded with the awe of the sacred land they
resembled. I knew these foremothers had wrestled to be heard.” In the
photographs, mirror image figures of Helène are dwarfed by
the imposing and sensual landscape that evokes the female form. “This
sounds very grandiose, but after looking for the foremothers, I decided, hey,
you know what, I’m going to be a future foremother." I thought of
this when I was very sick—in a coma for 20 days—when I
woke I was so very grateful that I had
survived I decided to go to the land in gratitude and
perhaps to get some answers—so once a year I do what I call
a Turning. I turn to the right, I turn to the left, I don’t come to any
conclusion. I don’t have any answers.”
Subsequent work
became much more personal. Two years ago in Israel, Helène showed
pieces that used her own history to highlight the many restrictions placed on
women by the Jewish orthodox faith. Included in the show was Helène’s
marriage contract and a 24’ long menstrual cycle chart to be used to determine
“clean days”. “It’s unreal,” she says. “But I lived it.”
Helène exhibited
her early process paintings: Paintings that Change at the legendary
Betty Parsons gallery in the 1970s. Helène shared a close bond with
the dealer and on October 25,, Helène will be on the
panel: Betty Parsons and her Artists at the Samuel Dorskey
Museum at SUNY New Paltz.
Helène’s
piece, Written Behind my Back, will be included in the 2015 Jerusalem
Biennale opening onSeptember 25. She is hoping All Rise will be in
the 2017 Biennale. As Helène describes it, The G-d
Project consists of nine “houses” without women. The last house is the
courthouse, the subject of All Rise. The ultra orthodox do not permit
women to be judges in the religious court in Israel. “I wanted to really do
something tangible. We have women cantors and we have women rabbis, but we do
not have women judges in the religious courts in Israel. Women who want to
get divorced are kept under the thumb of their husbands who
are often in cahoots with the judges. The women are
agunot—in Hebrew that means the ”chained ones.”
The All
Rise piece consists of three judge’s chairs, courtroom flags that are pink
pillowcases. Under the chairs are the fringes from the prayer shawls worn by
men. “That’s a little bit naughty,” she says with a chuckle. “But I had to do
it.”
Helène’s memoir
takes its title from The Breakings series: Whatever Is Contained
Must Be Released: My Jewish Orthodox Girlhood, My Life as a Feminist
Artist. Published by The Feminist Press in 2012, the memoir recounts
her breaking away from her past and the nostalgia she still has for it.
Balancing aesthetics
with ethics, Helène embraces both the sensuousness of the natural world
and the cerebral world of ideas in her work. Her rigorous religious upbringing
armed her with the language and knowledge to take on something as formidable as
the Five Books of Moses, and her evolution from complacent rabbi’s wife
into a woman attuned to her primal place in the grand scheme of things, adds an
aura of profound legitimacy to her perspective.
“The ‘70s was
about the body, the ‘80s the earth and the ‘90s, God,” says Helène even
as she allows as how she continues to work on everything all at once: “I
couldn’t just do one thing. It was annoying to people in the art world because
they wanted a signature piece. My work focuses on the issues of the day. And
the thing is, the issues never go away. I can’t just leave them
alone; I have to keep dealing with them.”
Helène?s work is
in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, MoMA, San
Francisco Museum of Modern Art and the Jewish Museum. Helène Has received
grants from the NEA, the Pollack–Krasner Foundation, New York State
Council for the Arts and the New York Foundation for the Arts. She is the
subject of a new documentary film by Kelly Spivey funded by the
New York Council for the Arts and the NEA. http://www.heleneaylon.com/