Friday, October 4, 2024

"Suleika Jaouad and Anne Francey: The Alchemy of Blood" at ArtYard, Frenchtown, NJ, through October 6


Suleika Jaouad, Just Married, 2024. Watercolor on cradled plywood. Courtesy of the artists. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Suleika Jaouad and Anne Francey: The Alchemy of Blood brings together artworks created separately and at different moments in the lives of a mother and daughter. Carefully curated, this beautiful exhibition effectively reveals how these various media creations inform one another. The theme, alchemy (the medieval belief in turning lead into gold), refers to the transformative powers of art. Here we see negative energies (fear, isolation, anxiety, helplessness, and pain) channeled into reaching for the opposite - for vitality, strength, and survival, even if it means surrendering into a vast unknown. The "blood" in the title references the mother-daughter relationship and their shared experience fighting Suleika's leukemia, a cancer of the blood and lymphatic system.


Suleika Jaouad, Just Married, 2024. Watercolor on cradled plywood. Anne Francey, Red and Grey, 1988. Acrylic on canvas. Courtesy of the artists. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Within the ArtYard's generous spaces, we witness an emotional conversation conducted in radiant and hushed tones, revealing gut-wrenching truths that words may not adequately express. The images are surreal from a place where time and certainty do not exist. They float in their own magical environments liberated from literary constraints. The whole project testifies to the courage of these powerful women, blessed with abundant talents that nurture each other. As a whole, these paintings, shields, and video installation, achieve monumentality because of  ArtYard's huge walls in its capacious galleries. 

The ghost of Mexican artist Frida Kahlo (1907-1954) also resides within these walls. Anne Francey gave Suleika a book about Frida Kahlo awhile ago. Knowing this information in advance of my trip to ArtYard, I noticed the influence of the preeminent autobiographical artist on Suleika Jaouad's fanciful style (also similar in spirit to Florine Stettheimer, 1871-1944) and considered the spiritual presence of Frida Kahlo as another blood-tie between this life-long mentor and her favorite disciple. 

Suleika Jaouad and Anne Francey: The Alchemy of Blood opened on June 22nd and closes on October 6th. To learn more about the artists' decisions and motivations, please watch the recorded conversation with Suleika Jaouad and Anne Francey, which took place on June 23rd.



Anne Francey and Suleika Jaouad in front of Anne Francey's Battle of the Angels, 1988. Acrylic on canvas. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/Miana Jun


From the ArtYard press release:

"The Alchemy of Blood is born of bodily transitions and transformations, limitations, and liminalities. Featuring works by Suleika Jaouad and those of her mother Anne Francey, the show pulls from periods of pregnancy, illness, and recovery — meditating on bodily agency, protective talismans, and emblems of the otherworldly that guided Jaouad and Francey through states of intense anticipation and corporeal metamorphosis.

The Alchemy of Blood is the first-ever art exhibition for Jaouad, author of the New York Times bestselling memoir, Between Two Kingdoms, which chronicles her experience of cancer in young adulthood.

During a spring residency at ArtYard, Joauad enlarged a series of delirious watercolor dreamscapes she had produced from her hospital bed during treatment for a 2022 relapse which had temporarily compromised her vision and ability to write.

Jaouad’s scenes and symbolisms share a foundational logic with the paintings Francey made three decades earlier while pregnant with Jaouad. Human-sized flowers seem to dance in vibrant washes of color — conjuring the womb and its growing life, on the brink between elsewhere and aliveness. Francey’s practice also shifted in response to her daughter’s diagnosis — she began making totemic ceramic “shields” to protect Jaouad through illness. These manifestations made concrete through clay and later woven hospital ephemera echo a medieval alchemist’s attempt to twist precious metals into a universal elixir for healing.

ArtYard is located at 13 Front St., Frenchtown, NJ, 08825. Free public hours are Wednesday through Sunday from 11 AM to 5 PM and Thursdays until 7 PM.

ArtYard is an incubator for creative expression and a catalyst for collaborations that reveal the transformational power of art. Its campus includes an arts center featuring exhibition space and a state-of-the-art theater as well as two buildings housing its residency program. To learn more, visit artyard.org."


About the Artists

Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/Miana Jun

Anne Francey with her Light Shield, 2016. Ceramic, string and bamboo. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/Miana Jun

Swiss-American artist Anne Francey is a highly accomplished visual artist whose accolades include a  2021 Fulbright Fellowship in Tunisia, her husband's homeland. She is known for her group art projects that spark collaborative artistic expression from everyone, especially children. Most recently, she completed 1001 Bricks: The City in All its States, which included 550 participants, and was installed as a mural in Tunis. Her 1997-2014 NYSCA grant supported ceramic murals projects in schools and communities in New York State.  

Anne earned a degree in painting and video from the École de Beaux-Arts de Lausanne, Switzerland in 1981. Shortly afterward she settled in Manhattan for a two year stint at the School of Visual Arts. There she studied painting, video, and film. In 1983, she began her MFA at Hunter College, which she finished in 1987. Suleika was born in 1988.  

Anne Francey, Suleika's Shield, 2012.  Ceramic, string, and bamboo.  Photo: Beth S. Gersh-Nesic


The concept of the "shields" grew out of the period of caring for Suleika during her first bone-marrow transplant. Reminiscent of the enveloping Japanese kimono and the protective Christian crucifix, they also reminded me of Byzantine mosaics that shimmer in dark apses of medieval churches, intentionally expressing the otherworldliness of the divine. In this exhibition's context, wherein we consider the alchemy of art, we can appreciate this mother's fashioning and weaving ceramic armor as a way to enlist magical forces when the odds of her daughter's cancer treatment were 35% survival occasioned by horribly debilitating side-effects for a very long time. (For those of us who might have worn a disposable paper gown over our clothes as well as a disposable mask during visits to a bone-marrow transplant recipient, we might associate Anne Francey's shields with the gown's shape and the fact that we wore these shields to protect the patient from our germs.)



Anne Francey, Icarus Shield, 2023; Mother's Shield, 2023; Mother's Shield, 2023. Ceramic, string and bamboo. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano



Anne Francey, The Astronomer's Shield, 2023; The Wonderer's Shield, 2023.  Ceramic, string and bamboo. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Anne has exhibited in numerous galleries all over the world, most notably in Switzerland, Tunisia, Nebraska, Kentucky, and Hudson, New York. This year, in addition to exhibiting her work at the ArtYard, she exhibited at the Schacht Gallery in Schuylerville, near Saratoga Springs, where her husband Hédi Jaouad, Sukeika's father, teaches French language and literature at Skidmore College.


Jon Batiste and Suleika Jaouad in front of her The Kingdoms, 2024. Watercolor on cradled plywood. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/Miana Jun

Suleika Jaouad, a graduate of Princeton University and Bennington College, became a best-selling author with her 2022 memoir Between Two Kingdoms. The book describes in detail her battle with leukemia at 22 through 26 years old, and her ambitious 100-day journey across the US to meet people who wrote to her during her first bone-marrow transplant. While going through her first bone-marrow transplant, she started a blog that was picked up by The New York Times as a column called "Life, Interrupted." This frequent feature brought her fame, especially within the community of cancer survivors or their survivors, families and family who lost a loved one to cancer. Since then her relationship with world-renowned composer and musician Jon Batiste has caste a wider spotlight on her life, creative work, and marriage which has navigated the highs of exhilarating joys and the lows of excruciating sorrows. Suleika's (with or with Jon Batiste) interviews are available online at 60 Minutes,  InterviewThe Today ShowThe Atlantic, among so many others, and in the documentary American SymphonyShe also gave a TED talk.


Suleika Jaouad. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/Miana Jun

During the 2020 Covid Lockdown, Suleika (pronounced "Su-lake-a," one who is peaceful and beautiful) Jaouad ("Jay-wad," one who is generous and gifted) founded an online arts collaborative called The Isolated Journal, which sent daily writing prompts to readers for most of 2020 and 2021. Now Suleika sends weekly personal essays and prompts culled from her daily life and the lives of her friends, acquaintances, and/or literary stars. (I joined TIJ in April 2020.)


 

     Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


    Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


While celebrating the publication of her first book in 2021 Suleika relapsed late in the year. The watercolors on wood panels come from the period of her second bone-marrow transplant. Since the opening of The Alchemy of Blood, cancer was detected and she is undergoing treatment once again. "Survival is its own act of creation," Suleika often says.  

Here, in this exhibition, her paintings seem to describe her drug-induced dreamscapes (what her husband Jon Batiste calls her "fever dreams"), the residue of visitations in a mind blurred by medicinal therapies. The work features familiar and phantasmagorical creatures supporting or surrounding her nude body connected to tubes hanging from bags of blood, her lifeline, and a metaphorical umbilical cord. Floating, drowning, swimming, and/or sleeping, she seems to surrender to these imaginary forces. Juxtaposed with her mother's gigantic growing, dancing flowers bursting with fresh blooms (new life), we notice an unintended relationship between their respective iconographies, for example in Suleika's Just Married, 2024, and Anne's Red and Grey, 1988 in the first gallery.

In Just Married a pelican-like bird holds a scale shaped like a kiddy pool in which a fragile nude female body lies supine with her blood supply close by. In the medieval Christian Bestiary, the pelican symbolizes selflessness and sacrifice. It kills and revives its young by plucking its breast to pour its blood on its chicks to ensure their survival. So too we know that Suleika's mother Anne gave life to her child multiple times, from pregnancy to caregiver - selflessly and tirelessly. She has been the guardian, the shield maker, and the unsung hero in this endlessly challenging role.  

More specifically,  Just Married tells us that this giant bird lifting up a fragile damsel references a bride and groom, Suleika and Jon (?), who were secretly married in February 2022 right before Suleika entered the hospital for her second bone-marrow transplant. Her husband too selflessly and diligently supported her, along with her parents and brother Adam, who was her bone-marrow donor. 

On the wall text, Suleika wrote: "Sometimes the best creativity comes from a savage place, a place of urgency--because you are doing it to keep yourself alive. Anything becomes possible on the canvas or the page." The proof is in front of our eyes.


Photographs of the Exhibition

Above and below are photographs sent to me from the ArtYard's Meghan van Dyk.  Thank you so much Meghan and Saxon for your generosity and assistance for this blog review.

Suleika Jaouad and Anne Francey, The Secret Braid, (Exterior) Suleika's hair, tissue paper and leather box. Courtesy of the artists. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano



Suleika Jaouad and Anne Francey, The Secret Braid, (Seen through the exterior glass), Suleika's hair, tissue paper and leather box. Courtesy of the artists. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Suleika Jaouad and Anne Francey, The Cost of Living, 2024.  Mixed media and video. Courtesy of the artists. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Suleika Jaouad and Anne Francey, The Cost of Living, 2024.  Mixed media and video. Courtesy of the artists. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Suleika Jaouad and Anne Francey, The Cost of Living, 2024.  Mixed media and video. Courtesy of the artists. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano



Photo: Beth Gersh-Nesic


 

All installation photographs: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano





Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano

Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano

Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Suleika Jaouad, Take Me to the River East, 2024 .Watercolor on cradle plywood. Anne Francey's Suleika's Shield, 2012. Ceramic, string and bamboo. Courtesy of the artists. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano



Suleika Jaouad, The Kingdoms, 2024; Anne Francey, Light Shield, 2016. Courtesy of the artists. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano




Suleika Jaouad, Ruminating, 2024. Watercolor on cradle plywood. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Suleika Jaouad, Shape of Waters, 2024. Watercolor on cradle plywood. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Suleika Jaouad, Fertile Crescent, 2024. Watercolor on cradle plywood. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Suleika Jaouad, The Immortals, 2024. Watercolor on cradle plywood. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano



Suleika Jaouad, Drowning Practice, 2024. Watercolor on cradle plywood. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano





Suleika Jaouad, The Kingdoms, 2024. Watercolor on cradle plywood. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano



Suleika Jaouad, Blood Ballet, 2024. Watercolor on cradle plywood. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Suleika Jaouad, The Sacrifice, 2024. Watercolor on cradle plywood. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Suleika Jaouad, Take Me to the River East, 2024. Watercolor on cradle plywood. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Courtesy of ArtYard/John Carlano


Post Script added October 17, 2024:

Suleika Jaouad announced her forthcoming book, available in April 2025.
To pre-order, contact your favorite independent bookstore or various booksellers online.




No comments: