Helene Aylon
Helène Aylon | |
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Born |
Brooklyn, New York | February 4, 1931
Nationality | American |
Education | Brooklyn College |
Known for | Painting, Installation art, Multimedia art |
Helène Aylon (born Helene Greenfield, February 4, 1931, Brooklyn, New York) is an American multimedia and ecofeminist artist.[1][2] Her work can be divided into three phases: Process art (1970s), anti-nuclear art (1980s), and The G-d Project (1990s and early 2000s), a feminist commentary on the Hebrew Bible and other established traditions.
Early life and education
While living in Brooklyn, Aylon received an orthodox Jewish upbringing and is fluent in Hebrew.[3] She attended grade school at Shulamith School for Girls and her high school education was at the Midrasha; Aylon, however, originally wanted to attend the High School of Music and Art in Manhattan.[2] While attending high school, she became engaged to a rabbinical student named Mandel H. Fisch (b. 1926); they married in 1949.[4][5] Aylon moved immediately to Montréal, where her husband served as a rabbi. After two years, she gave birth to a son, Nathaniel Fisch, followed by a daughter, Renee Emunah. The couple returned to Brooklyn while Aylon was pregnant with her second child. Mandel Fisch was diagnosed with cancer in 1956 and died five years later; Aylon was 30.[1][2][3]
Prior to her husband's death, Aylon enrolled as an art student at Brooklyn College, where she studied under Ad Reinhardt. After finishing college, she was commissioned to paint a mural for the youth employment center in the Brooklyn neighborhood of Bedford-Stuyvesant. When photographed for a newspaper article, she said that her name was Helène Aylon, in which she used the Hebrew equivalent of her first name as her surname.[1][3] She subsequently taught at San Francisco State University and California College of Arts and Crafts in Oakland.[6]
Aylon's first notable work, Rauch (Spirit, Wind, Breath) (1965), was a 16-foot mural, commissioned for the now-defunct Synagogue Library at JFK International Airport, that attempted to portray Judaism through the eyes of women.[7]
Process art
Aylon's earliest exploration of process art was done in California in the 1970s. She created a series called Paintings That Change (1974–77), which included Tar Pouring, Drifting Boundaries, Receding Beige, and Oval on Left Edge. All of the works consisted of oil on paper which would slowly transform as the oil moved, relying on chance.[2] In 1978, she began work a series called The Breakings, for which she poured linseed oil on large panels that she placed flat on the studio floor and allowed the oil to form a thick skin. Next, she tilted the panels so that gravity would cause the oil would form a sac underneath the surface, which was subsequently allowed to break, again dependent largely on chance. As a result, the work looked completely different than it originally appeared.[8] Aylon described this work as "very wet, orgasmic process art."[2] In 1970 and 1972, Aylon showed at the Max Hutchinson Gallery in SoHo; in 1975 and 1979, her Paintings that Change in Time were exhibited at Betty Parsons Gallery, Susan Caldwell Gallery, MIT, and the Oakland Museum.[2]
Anti-nuclear and eco-activist art
By the 1980s, Aylon, was a self-described eco-feminist.[2] She began to create anti-nuclear and eco-activist art, which included Earth Ambulance.[9] This work consisted of an "ambulance" (a converted U-Haul van) that symbolized an attempt to save the world from nuclear war. Using the Earth Ambulance, Aylon gathered dirt from Strategic Air Command nuclear bases, uranium mines, and nuclear reactors from across the United States. She stuffed the dirt into pillowcases and used them in a demonstration at the United Nations during the Second Special Session on Nuclear Disarmament on June 12, 1982. In front a group of spectators, the pillowcases were carried down the steps of Ralph Bunche Park on army stretchers. In 1992, to celebrate the end of the Cold War, she installed a seed-filled ambulance at the Brooklyn Bridge Anchorage, an alternative space in New York City. Pillowcases from previous projects were hung around the installation.[2] For her later Bridge of Knots, Aylon created chains of knotted pillowcases, inscribed with dreams and nightmares about nuclear war, which were draped around the façades of the Knoxville Museum of Art in 1993, Berkeley Art Museum in 1995, and American University Museum in 2006.[7][10]
In 1985, Aylon traveled to Japan to mark the 40th anniversary of the atomic bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. Floating sacks of seeds, grain, pods, and bamboo were sent down the rivers towards those two cities.[6][11] In 1995, Aylon's video of the "two sacs en route" to Hiroshima and Nagasaki was shown on the Sony Jumbotron in Times Square.
The G-d Project
After the death of Aylon’s husband in 1961, she began to develop an idea of reformed Judaism that rejected the patriarchal notions in the Five Books of Moses.[12] In the 1990s, Aylon began work on The G-d Project, a nine-part project that spanned two decades. The first work, The Liberation of G-d, contains the five books of Moses, in English and Hebrew, which sit on velvet-covered stands. Each page is covered in translucent parchment. The sound of turning parchment pages was recorded and played in a loop while the work was on exhibition.[13] Aylon placed the 54 sections of the Torah on glass shelves along a wall, adjacent to the five books of Moses, and used a pink highlighter to mark phrases that, according to her, convey patriarchal attitudes.[3] She also targeted words or phrases that conveyed a sense of vengeance, deception, cruelty, and misogyny that had been falsely attributed to God.[6][14] The work was first exhibited in Too Jewish? Challenging Traditional Identities at the Armand Hammer Museum of Art in March 1996. During the exhibition, Aylon formally invited area rabbis to visit and discuss her work.[15]
In 1997, she completed The Women's Section, the second work in The G-d Project, which is dedicated to women whose estranged husbands do not grant them a religious divorce, making it impossible for them to remarry. Included are texts from the Torah that speak of women’s "impurity" and "virginity." In 1998, Aylon created the third work in the series, My Notebooks, which consists of 54 blank 8.5 × 11″ notebooks that form a group of columns. The closed notebooks, with their dark covers, form black columns; the open notebooks form white columns. A transparency of Aylon's photographs from a Jewish girl's school is projected across the notebooks.[16] The work is "Dedicated to Mrs. Rashi and to Mrs. Maimonides, for surely they have something to say and was intended to be a statement on women's lack of scholarship and participation in education."[15] It also alludes to the female teachers of Aylon's all-female school, who could only teach commentary from male rabbis.[10][17] The final work in The G-d Project is All Rise, an imagined feminist court where women who have been forbidden on a Beit Din, the Jewish court of law, can now judge.[2]
In 1999, Aylon created Epilogue: Alone with My Mother and My Bridal Chamber: My Marriage Contract. The latter is a simple bed covered in a white bedspread that Aylon constructed from handkerchiefs and a wedding canopy. Around it are four columns with superimposed projetions of photographs that show the artist in her wedding gown. Behind the headboard, Aylon wrote quotes from Leviticus concerning women's "uncleanliness" and "impurity." The work was meant to be a comment on marital and religious constraints felt by woman.[5] In 2002, Aylon created The Partition is in Place, but the Service Can't Begin, a comment on the segregation of male and female worshippers in the synagogue. As noted by Aylon, "The material I thought appropriate for the Partition that separates male and female worshippers is made of the ritual garb worn by religious men. But if there were nine male worshippers and one thousand female worshippers, the service could not begin because the service requires the presence of ten men."[8]
Public collections and recognition
Aylon′s work is in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum, Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and Jewish Museum. She is the recipient of grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, Pollock-Krasner Foundation, New York State Council for the Arts, and New York Foundation for the Arts.
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 1.2 Debra Nussbaum Cohen, "The Liberation of Helène Aylon," Forward (13 July 2012).
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.5 2.6 2.7 2.8 Helène Aylon, Whatever Is Contained Must Be Released: My Jewish Orthodox Girlhood, My Life as a Feminist Artist (New York: Feminist Press, 2012).
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 Gloria Feman Orenstein, "Torah Study, Feminism and Spiritual Quest in the Work of Five American Jewish Women Artists," Nashim: A Journal of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues 14 (Fall 2007): 97–130.
- ↑ "Helène Aylon, Bucking the Bridal Bridle," Washington Post, 30 December 2001.
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Dinitia Smith, "Artist Challenges Ancient Marital Rituals"," Chicago Tribune (25 July 2001).
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 6.2 Leslie Katz, "Pen in Hand, Artist Highlights Disturbing Torah Verses," Jewish Bulletin of Northern California (6 September 1996).
- ↑ 7.0 7.1 Alison Gass, "The Art and Spirituality of Helène Aylon," Bridges 8 (Spring 200): 12–18.
- ↑ 8.0 8.1 Barbara Cavaliere, "Helène Aylon," Arts Magazine (May 1979): 29–30.
- ↑ Michael Wise, "Double Yentls, Chanel Kippahs and P.C. Torahs: The Times are Changing the Jewish Museum," Forward (1 July 1994).
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Roberta Smith, "When the Medium Doesn't Agree With the Message," New York Times (28 August 1992).
- ↑ Benjamin Genocchio, "Magic Ambulance Seeks End to Warfare," New York Times (15 January 2006).
- ↑ Rolando Matalon and Helène Aylon, "A Conversation between Artist Helène Aylon and Rabbi Rolando Matalon," Bridges 8 (Spring 2000): 19–24.
- ↑ Ilana Stanger, "Liberating God: Artist Helène Aylon Edits Genesis with Her Pink Magic Marker," Lilith (31 October 1996).
- ↑ Max Halpern, "Five Artists—Five Faiths: Spirituality in Contemporary Art: Aukland Art Museum," Art Paper 29, no. 1 (January/February 2005):42.
- ↑ 15.0 15.1 Christopher Knight, "Too Jewish? Good Query," LA Times (4 February 1997).
- ↑ Ruth Ost, "About the Cover: Helène Aylon's My 54 Notebooks," Cross Currents 48, no. 2 (Summer 1998): 248.
- ↑ Grace Glueck, "Creative Souls who Keep the Faith or Challenge its Influence," New York Times(21 April 2000).
External links
- Official website of Helene Aylon
- National Museum of American Jewish History - Helene Aylon
- Helene Aylon at the University Art Museum - Berkeley, California
- Jewish Women and the Feminist Revolution from the Jewish Women's Archive
- Earth Ambulance at the Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art
- Helene Aylon at Art at the Katzen
- Works by or about Helene Aylon in libraries (WorldCat catalog)
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