The Women's Work Issue Women's Work. Pen and Brush. 2019 | Page 16

pen + brush x of note and trompeta de Angel, as a central object and symbol. This is yet another example of the artist’s reverence for reclaiming and elevating the seemingly ordinary, domestic, or dismissed offhandedly as feminine, into the sublime. The campana flower is sacred to Afro-Cuban religious rituals and rites and to Orisha worship. Tied to Afro-Cuban herbalism and medicinal uses, both its leaf and flower are used to purify, cleanse, and banish negativity. Campos-Pons’s use of the campana flower, in whole and in reassembled fragments, renders the work quite delicate and fragile, yet, paradoxically, its formidability is retained in the power of its medicinal properties. Although the campana flower is in parts, there lingers the possibility of repair. As a representation of women’s work, Angel’s Trumpets, Devil’s Bells flourishes as a potent meditation on naming, witnessing, and healing. Suchitra Mattai Suchitra Mattai is deeply concerned with the artistic labor of women’s work—the skill, craftsmanship, artistry, detail, intricacy, and love invested in a vintage patchwork tapestry, or a silk sari, or a crocheted lace that transforms it from a sequence of threads into a work of art. Mattai's personal commitment to the slow, meditative and increasingly elusive handmade process—weaving, knitting, crocheting, sewing, needlepointing, and embroidering, which have been buoyed across generations by the hands of women—reflect the artist’s political consciousness of the visible and the invisible work of women. She wants to “give voice to the original makers”— women. 5 This reverence for women’s work can be seen simply in the ways the artist honors the threads, both tangible and metaphorical, woven throughout the vintage saris in The Sweeter Side or the crocheted fibers of Mala or the embroidered canvases in Collages: 12 Identity. With each puncture of embroidery, each woven thread, each knitted yarn, Mattai is challenging the ways women’s artistic production rooted in handmade traditions have been excluded, dismissed, trivialized, or outright erased from art historical discourse as “domestic” or “feminine.” Instead, the artist elevates their value and centers them squarely within the history of art making. Mattai, like so many of us, is a daughter of migration. Embedded in these works are the histories, memories, and visual codes of her Indian heritage. In each small collage that make up the larger wall installation of Collages: Identity, an Indian woman or girl is centered as the protagonist as way for the artist to pay homage to the multiplicity of their lives. She often thinks of her work, for example the formidable The Sweeter Side , a tapestry of vintage saris enclosed in a heavy metal frame, as a “monument” for the women and laborers from India and its diaspora, one that bridges women of the past with the Indian women of her own family who ensured the passing on of handmade traditions. In Mattai’s work, women of the Indian diaspora are always present. Mattai’s migratory paths through the Caribbean/South American region, particularly Guyana, where she was born, then onto to Canada, and the United States inform a dynamic artistic practice characterized by what the she deems “disconnected landscapes that are unreal but offer a lingering familiarity.” 6 While employing the processes of women’s work to make these textile sculptures and installations, Mattai is in conversation, in both subtle and overt ways, about how women navigate through and out of migration, displacement, and borders. All three works teem with texture, materiality, and laborious detail as the artist weaves together a bounty of objects suggestive of the turbulent and disruptive experiences of migration. To be immersed in the details of Mattai’s work, to witness her breathe life into seemingly unremarkable found objects—a belt, a tassel—only to reinvent them into monuments of beauty, is a reminder of the words of Haitian-born writer Edwidge Danticat who posits that all immigrants are artists for the ways in which we fashion and make a life from nothing. She writes: “That experience of touching down in a totally foreign place is like having a blank canvas: You begin with nothing, but stroke by stroke you build a life. This process requires everything great art requires— risk-tasking, hope, a great deal of imagination, all the qualities that are the building blocks of art. You must be able to dream something nearly impossible and toil to bring it into existence.” 7 Suchitra Mattai, The Sweeter Side, 2019, vintage saris, belt, fiber, tassel, faux plant, metal frame, 72 x 33.75 inches. Courtesy of the artist and K Contemporary. Women’s Work For Suchitra Mattai, women’s work is steeped both in the activism of the immigrant and the poetics of an artistic practice. 13 Miora Rajaonary Miora Rajaonary, Geneviève, from the series, Lamba, 2018, archival c-print, 33 x 33 inches. Courtesy of the artist. Taking on a Herculean task is a vibrant community of African photographers entrenched in the work of transforming the images of their continent. Miora Rajaonary, the Madagascar-born photographer who currently lives and works in Johannesburg, South Africa, stands tall among them. In a recent interview with The Washington Post , she shared, “The stories and the photos about Africa remain the same . . . I wish I could see a more nuanced perspective on Africa, other than the one highlighting war, disease and poverty because Africa is definitely more than that.” 8 As a result, Rajaonary’s photography practice, which spans the mediums of documentary, conceptual, fashion, and portraiture, offers a direct challenge to the all too familiar images of Madagascar, known colloquially as “the 8 th continent” because of its isolated location off the coast of East Africa. Unfortunately, what the global public often sees of the visual culture of Madagascar, one of the least visited countries in Africa, still centers on the