"WE MAKE THE ROAD BY WALKING"
an exhibition by artists Sama Alshaibi and Beth Krensky
Exhibition at Dinnerware Artspace, Tucson, Arizona
April 5th - April 26th 2008 (opening reception on April 5th 7-9pm)
Sponsored by "Conversations Across Religious Traditions"
Office of the President at the University of Arizona

Previously exhibited at the Mizel Museum, Denver, Colorado
October 11, 2007 - January 24, 2008

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artist statement

Beth Krensky

 
 

My current work is tied to my being a mother. I continue to explore ways that art (both the process of creating art as well as the finished product) can transcend the political for the human. In particular, I am very interested in children—what happens to them, what is possible for them, and what our responsibility as adults is for them.

The work for this exhibition is based on my own and my people’s traditions, rituals and texts. I have drawn both from centuries-old traditions and objects as well as from my family’s more recent history of emigration from Russia, Austria and Hungary at the turn of the last century. My body holds a piece of the collective consciousness of the Jewish people as well as my individual and familial memories.

Conceptually, the ideas of lineage, motherhood, Jewish ritual and the region marking a boundary or threshold have informed all of the work. I have chosen different media to support conceptual choices. Bronze memorializes as well as reflects the materials used during a specific period of antiquity. Copper has been used in religious ceremonies for millennia and is considered a medium between the spirit and physical worlds. Olive wood comes from Bethlehem and represents both ancestral roots and the contested land.

Much of the work is reminiscent of ritual artifacts, both real and imagined. Many of the pieces are small enough to carry on one’s person, just as my ancestors carried a few small possessions with them as they escaped pogroms in Russia and Eastern Europe. The physical journeys of my ancestors have become metaphorical passages that raise questions about our contemporary location(s). On what ground do I stand and in whose house?

Women—historical, biblical and contemporary—have influenced the work. Sarah and Hagar, the Jewish matriarchs, Jewish and Muslim women that have come together to work for peace, and numerous Jewish women I have interviewed are reflected in some of the pieces.

The idea of “re-membering,” or putting back together something, is a theme woven through some of the work. “Bridge III” can represent fragments of something disparate, or perhaps fragments that can be connected in some way to create a bridge. It is my intent that the work merely raise questions that can be contemplated and discussed, and perhaps move us across real or imagined divides to common ground.