Friday, December 11, 2009

Karla Forez Albor at AIR GALLERY


Colombina para el Perine, performance Bogota, Colombia 1999 / Emilio Maribel, Jorge, Magdalena, Enrique, Karla, Monica, Jhon, Eleonora, Arturo


Una danza para el vientre, New York 2004 / Adriana, Karla

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE



Mother/mother- *
curated by Jennifer Wroblewski
December 2, 2009 – January 3, 2010
Opening Reception: Thurs., Dec. 3nd from 6pm to 8pm
Film and Video Screening: Sat., Dec 12th from 6 to 8pm

BROOKLYN, NY, November 2009 – A.I.R. Gallery is pleased to announce Mother/mother- *, a group exhibition curated by artist and 2008- 2009 A.I.R. Gallery Fellow Jennifer Wroblewski. The exhibition will be on view in Gallery I from December 2, 2009 through January 3, 2010. There will be an opening reception on Thursday, December 3, from 6pm until 8pm. On Saturday, December 12, there will be a special screening of film and video (see artist list below). On Wednesday, December 2 exhibiting artist Rachel Howfield will facilitate an informal roundtable discussion on issues related to being an artist and a parent, as part of the APT (Artist Parents Talking) program, which she founded in the UK.

Mother/mother-* is an exhibition of work made by artists within the years immediately following a pregnancy or the birth of a child. The exhibition includes drawings, paintings, narrative and non-narrative film and video, sculpture, an artist’s book, an audio selection, and one piece of embroidery. The artists live and work in the U.S., Canada, Scotland, England, and Spain. For the purpose of the exhibition, the title Mother/mother- * also refers to father artists. “Mother” is the term that elicits the great frisson when uttered within the larger art culture.

Exhibiting artists: Shelley Rae, Kakyoung Lee, Erika deVries, Rachel Howfield, Abbey Williams, Darren Floyd, Keltner + Valentova, Karla Florèz Albor, Kate Wilhelm, Lindsay Page, Parisa Taghizadeh, Silvia Iturria, Liz Dierdorf, Xiaowie Chen, Judith van Praag, Regina Granne, Vicki Sher, Sharon Thomas, Hayley Hara, Thom Hasenmayer, Monica Bock, Ivan Stojakovic, Vikki Michalios, Rebecca Klementovich, Elizabeth Foster, Barbara Campbell Thomas, Jan Johnson, Leah Souffrant, Marie-Francoise Theodore*, Emilie Upzak*, Ingrid Berthon-Moine*, Ilana Rein*
* Artists whose work will be screened on Saturday December 12, 6-8 pm.

About the curator: Jennifer Wroblewski is an artist and 2008-2009 A.I.R. Gallery Fellow. She was awarded a 2009 NYFA Fellowship in Printmaking/Drawing/Book Arts. She is an adjunct lecturer in the School of Art + Design at (SUNY) Purchase College. Mother/mother- * is her first curatorial effort.

A.I.R. – ADVOCATING FOR WOMEN IN THE ARTS SINCE 1972. A.I.R. Gallery is located at 111Front Street, #228, in the DUMBO neighborhood of Brooklyn. Gallery hours: Wednesday – Sunday, 11am to 6pm. For directions please see www.airgallery.org. For additional information, please contact Kat Griefen at A.I.R. Gallery at 212-255-6651 or kgriefen@airgallery.org.

Image: Parisa Taghizadeh, KRISTINA-Filmmaker, digital photograph, 16 x 20”, 2008.

MOTHER/MOTHER


Cumbia 2009, Teatro Iati, Valeria, Valentina, Enrique, Karla, Olaya Florez Family


The Green Inchworm 2008, Long Island Library, Olaya Florez Family


Una danza para el vientre, NY 2004


Ensayo para Colombina para el Perine, Bogota Colombia, 1999

MOTHER/MOTHER Exhibition at AIR GALLERY www.airgallery.com
I believe that dance offers the possibility for each body to realize its expressive capacity in every moment of our daily lives. In 1999 while I was living in Bogota, Colombia as a dancer and choreographer, I started my journey into pregnancy. In the first three months I still continued to perform contemporary pieces; in the following months I choreographed a piece in a non-conventional space: a street intersection where the light posts were connected with hardwire from where the dancers hung to move. This piece was inspired by my husband’s idea of walking in the air and being transported by aerial tunnels. The piece was entitled: Aerovias or Airways. Interesting enough, at this moment I still continue to find associations between this piece and my pregnancy period.

Later in my gestation I was able to materialize my long held perception: dance has a possibility for each body. I called on four other pregnant women whose pregnancy time were similar to mine. The basic idea was to put on stage a non-repeatable performance where pregnant women could express their feelings and concerns. We created the choreographic movements, made most of the music and produced multimedia items in a piece that I entitled: “Colombina para el Perine“, “A Lollipop for the Perineum“. The piece was performed three times during our last month of pregnancy, and each of the five fathers participated in different ways.

The setting for the piece had the audience entering the theater through an installation that tried to mimic an uterus, using plastic stripes hanging from the ceiling. Photographs of the five pregnant women taken during these final months, both at home and rehearsals, were posted on the plastic stripes.

Four years later when I was already living in NYC, I tried to create a similar piece but I only found one pregnant dancer after a hard search. Instead, I ended up performing a small piece inspired in middle eastern dance movements that also served as a photograph session for a visual artist working on a project about pregnant women.

After my two pregnancies I mainly focused my work as an artist with children. I have also expanded my creative range by writing children’s books and creating performances based on children’s stories, many from Colombian folk. The result is a storytelling performance that combines dance and music.

This work allowed me to further involve all my family, adjusting to my new life as a parent, finding that it was a great way to get them involved in my artistic projects while making the movements and the staging more attractive and fun for the little audience. Some of the performances are presented as a Performing Family, with my two daughters as dancers (now 9 and 5 years old) and my husband, traveling to different places to show my work nowadays as a dancer storyteller.