Press Release: Begin from Observation

Teddy Benfield, Untitled (Indoor Open 2), 2020. House paint, acrylic paint, oil paint, ink, krink ink, oil pastel, china marker, spray paint on canvas.
48 x 48 in

April 20 - May 29, 2022

Abigail Ogilvy Gallery proudly presents Begin From Observation, a three-person exhibition featuring Teddy Benfield (Boston, MA), Richard Keen (Brunswick, ME), and Samuel Stabler (Athens, GA). The exhibition title is derived from the techniques taught in an artist’s first courses: when learning how to draw you must begin from observation. It is one of the most basic but true rules of learning composition, proportions, rendering, and everything else important that must be built upon before an artist can let themselves branch out or break these rules. The premier step any artist must take is learning how to draw directly from learning how to see. In this exhibition, each artist explores truth through abstraction as a method of viewing the world in its most authentic form. The artists render still life, landscapes, and portraiture, referencing art history’s past combined with the materials of the present.

In his still life paintings, Teddy Benfield mixes a multitude of media to generate a dialogue between traditional still life genre painting and the relationships we have with marketplace consumerism through contemporary internet culture. Benfield’s compositions are packed with the representational imagery we see every day from brands, logos, motifs and even patterns claimed by specific subcultures, like the black and white checkerboard pattern often associated with skaters. In doing so, Benfield opens up a conversation around the ever-changing definition of culture, and how it is so often dictated by class differences. 

Richard Keen, Blue Trees No. 10 (Dresden), 2021. Acrylic and oil on canvas. 36 x 30 in.

Conversely, Richard Keen aims to remove the representational details in his work, obscuring lush landscapes by paring them down to color and form. Keen’s saturated, geometric compositions explore the relationship between nature, the man-made, and the space that exists between. In breaking down his subjects to the most basic elements, he finds truth in their simplicity, allowing both himself and his audience to see these subjects through their own unique lens. His motifs are inspired by his time spent in the woods of Maine.

In his debut presentation at Abigail Ogilvy Gallery, artist Samuel Stabler guides his viewers through familiar imagery with a modern eye. Stabler, as many great artists before him, revisits the work of old masters, playing off of the subject matter to create a picture that is wholly his own. Using highlighter neon colors and gold gouache, Stabler chooses parts of the original compositions that he has felt need more attention than they have previously been granted. In a recent interview with Gallery 151, Stabler states: “I like the idea of taking something that was maybe forgotten and bringing it back out.” In doing so, he alters our perception of the Western canon and celebrates the cycle of reinvention in art history. 

All together the three artists’ work combines meticulously rendered details that inspire deep examination. A reminder of the importance of the past in order to present subject matter in a way that both remains dynamic and speaks to the way they see the world in this moment.

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Teddy Benfield is a Boston based artist from Connecticut (b. 1992). He received his MFA from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University (2018) and his BFA in Visual arts from Union College (2015) as well as a certificate in Sneaker Design from Fashion Institute of Technology (2019). 

Samuel Stabler, Untitled Combine (Stallone, McQueen), 2021. Pen, acrylic paint, hand cut paper. 50 x 38 in. (framed)

Richard Keen (b. 1971, Pennsylvania) is a contemporary abstract artist who works in a variety of media, including painting, murals, and sculpture. He has shown in numerous New England solo and group exhibitions at the University of Maine Museum of Art, Elizabeth Moss Gallery, The Painting Center, New York, Gallery 49, Simon Gallery, and Barrett Art Center, among others. Keen has been featured in Art New England, Boston Voyager Magazine, Portland Herald Press, and Maine Home and Design. 

Georgia-born and based artist Samuel Stabler is known for his contemporary take on Old Master paintings. The artist recreates these masterworks in highly detailed pen-and-ink drawings, which he then obscures with streaks of neon yellow, adding a contemporary update to centuries-old masterpieces. Sourcing images from the internet, he also creates meticulous cut-outs, transforming once familiar subjects into abstract webs of line and contour. “Old Masters used to paint the masters before them,” he has said. “The internet age has allowed me to have this huge access to information, so I’m appropriating it in the way that makes sense to me now.”

Press Inquiries: kaylee@abigailogilvy.com

Press Release: Fresh Faces 2022

Fresh Faces 2022
January 19 – February 27, 2022

Installation view

Featuring: Jared Abner | Patrick Brennan | Vicente Cayuela | Liam Coughlin | Olivia Leigh Curtis | Veronica Dannis-Dobroczynski | Anna Demko | Leslie Donahue | Grace Hager | James Johnson | Justin Kedl | Catherine LeComte | Eva Lewis | Hailin Li | Billy Lyons | Emily Manning-Mingle | Agustina Markez | James Morningstar | Meghan Murray | Chen Peng | Abby Preshong | Stephen Proski | Stephanie Van Riet | Malia Setalsingh | Kathryn Shiber | Jingqi Steinhiser | Scott Vander Veen

Abigail Ogilvy Gallery is proud to present our fourth annual Fresh Faces, an exhibition that introduces new artwork by the Northeast’s most talented student artists, located in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Connecticut, Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont & New York. The exhibition features 27 artists working in a variety of styles and media.

Jared Abner is a recent graduate of Rochester Institute of Technology’s furniture design program where he earned a BFA. While at RIT, Jared was introduced to the imaginative furniture and sculpture of his professor, Andy Buck. Buck’s work inspired Jared to play and explore the medium of wood and the contingencies of his tools. Jared continues this exploration in his Boston based studio.

Patrick Brennan, Polyethylene Leviathan, Acrylic on plastic, 11.8 x 11 x 7.9 in., 2021

Patrick Brennan is a Boston-based LGBTQ artist and recent graduate of the Massachusetts College of Art and Design sculpture department. He works with a variety of concepts and media but his primary focus since September has been on found object collages using army men formed into ouroboros shapes to critique the plastics industry, military-industrial complex, and toy companies. In addition to his art practice, Patrick is also an art educator, currently employed by the education department at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Museum of Fine Arts, and Massachusetts College of Art and Design.

Vicente Cayuela Aliaga (b. 1998) is a Chilean multimedia artist and photographer based in Waltham, MA. Born in a family of wood and textile workers, Cayuela developed an early affinity for aesthetics and manual work at his family’s carpentry workshop. Meeting at the intersection of photography, object-making, readymades, and digital media, his current series of constructed photographs explore seldom- talked issues about infancy and adolescence including loss, trauma, lack of guidance, sexual alienation, drug addiction and social isolation. In 2018, Cayuela received the full Wien International Scholarship to study Fine Arts with concentrations in Sculpture and Digital Media at Brandeis University. Since then, his sculptural and photographic work has been exhibited in multiple undergraduate exhibitions across the Boston area and received support from multiple fellowships and production grants. In 2021, his sculptural cyanotype work was exhibited in his first group museum exhibition at the Winter Solstice show at the Griffin Museum of Photography. His ongoing series “JUVENILIA” is being exhibited in March at the Griffin Museum of Photography’s Lafayette City Center Satellite Gallery as part of the Photography Atelier 35 group exhibition. Cayuela is a Studio Honors candidate at Brandeis University where is also the 2021–2022 Starr Warner Curatorial Intern at the Rose Art Museum of Modern and Contemporary Art.

Liam Coughlin, Preservation, Charcoal and plaster, 30 x 24 in., 2021

Liam Coughlin, born and raised in Townsend, MA, creates large-scale land-based site-specific artworks, sculpture, and multimedia installations using wood, stone, fire, charcoal, plaster, film, and photography that thematically engage ideas of temporality, religion, ritual, and human being’s symbiotic relationship with nature. He often incorporates open flames, burn-carving and charring as a technique to achieve an aesthetic balance between the controlled, structured form and the improvisational, free form gesture. Drawing inspiration from the early land art movements of the 20th century as well as mid-century surrealist experimental film art, Coughlin’s work incorporates a great deal of physical exertion and performance as he harvests large logs by hand and burns them over open fires before capturing these moments of transmutation through video and photography. His studio work and land art practice aim to invite the viewer to heighten their spatial awareness, contemplate their personal connection to the natural world and think critically about how that connection may serve as an intervention in or promotion of the natural spaces they experience regularly.

Coughlin is based between Waltham and Townsend, MA. In 2017, he received a BA in English from Brandeis University where he is currently pursuing a post-baccalaureate in fine art.

Olivia Leigh Curtis is a sculptor who was born in the year 2000 and raised in Massachusetts. She attends MassArt where she works primarily with glass and ceramics, and enjoys experimenting with phenomena across media. She finds wonder in the world around her; an activity that drives her process-based studio practice. When Olivia is not in school she works as an apprentice at McDermott Glass Studio in Sandwich, MA. She has also interned for Toots Zynsky in Providence, RI.
 She has shown work in Saugus Iron Works’ “Contemporary Cast Iron” Show and is the 2021 recipient of the Stephen D. Paine Scholarship.
She will graduate from Massachusetts College of Art and Design in 2022.

Veronica Dannis-Dobroczynski is an artist from Detroit, Michigan pursuing her MFA at Boston University. Her work explores embodiment and identity through crops of the body, focusing on queerness, intimacy, and hyper-fixation.



Anna Demko is a 21-year-old process based sculptor, who works primarily in latex. “Because of the skin-like quality of latex, I take it and flip the perception of everyday objects by giving them human qualities. I enjoy the very long process that is drying many layers of latex over and over. My process involves casting metals, woodworking, and drawing in chalk pastels, though latex will always be my favorite material. Being able to take something that starts in a liquid form, turning it into a flat solid, then a 3- dimensional object is a process I hold very dear to my heart. I have been a sculptor for a little over 3 years and have been studying at Massachusetts College of Art and Design.”

Leslie Donahue, Pool II, Oil on canvas, 36 x 24 in., 2021

Leslie Donahue “mines visual references from unusual places. Advertisements, screenshots from trash television, low-quality photos sent by my mother, blurry images from online marketplaces, and other fleeting snapshots of the world around me are obsessively collected and carefully analyzed for elements of truth. Appropriating these images adds to an ever-expanding narrative in which I convey the strangeness that is living in America in 2021. Emotions are indirectly expressed and dissected through color, composition, and brush strokes. A disillusioned form of social realism approaches abstract expressionism with humor and an appreciation for beauty in the unexpected.”

Grace Hager is an observational painter currently living and working in Portland, Maine. In 2015, she received her Bachelor of Fine Arts in Painting with a Minor in Art History from the Maine College of Art & Design. She has spent the past six years livingin the New Haven, Connecticut area, and recently relocated to Portland to return to MECA&D to pursue her Master of Fine Arts. As a representational painter, her interests in image making and object making intersect in what is being depicted and how.


James Ming Johnson was born in Bangkok Thailand in 1990, and raised in California. He lives and works in Waltham, MA where he is currently a post- baccalaureate student at Brandeis University. His work deals with history, memory, and American identity. He previously studied at the Art Students League of New York, and at Stanford University, where he received a B.A. in Film & Media Studies.

Justin Kedl is a sculptor, cartoonist, and designer born in Minnesota and raised in Colorado. He discovered a love of sculpture halfway through his three-year career at Gordon College and graduated with a BA in both sculpture and design. He is currently pursuing an MA in Modern and Contemporary Art History through Azusa Pacific University's online program. Most notably, Justin was one of over 30 artists to work on Natura Obscura, an immersive installation at the Museum of Outdoor Arts in Colorado, and he was a Young-Artist-in-Residence at the Guldagergaard International Ceramic Research Center in Skælskør, Denmark. His work has been exhibited nationally and internationally. He now lives with his wife in Beverly, Massachusetts.


Catherine LeComte is a Boston-based artist whose work consists of personal narratives. Her practice incorporates photography, installation, and video; utilizing various techniques to bring forth emotive reactions through her work. She uses photography as a tool to examine her familial relationships, memory, and personal experiences with trauma. A native of New Hampshire, but currently resides in Boston, MA, she has worked for more than a decade as a photographer. She holds a BFA in Photography, and is currently attaining her MFA in Photography from Massachusetts College of Art & Design.

Hailin Li, Flower Series: One, Cupboard, paper, ink, 40 x 30 in., 2021

Eva Lewis is an artist from Dayton, Ohio. She graduated with a BFA in 2017 at Wright State University. Lewis went on to do a local fellowship at the Dayton Art Institute, study through a residency with Mount Gretna School of Art and show in Dayton art exhibitions while teaching art to k-12 students. In 2020 she joined Boston University as a candidate of their MFA painting program - she is projected to graduate in 2022. Lewis currently resides in Boston Massachusetts with her cat, Titian.

Hailin Li is currently a sophomore student at the School of Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts. Most of her works are oil-based or acrylic paintings and linear drawings. She explores the nontraditional approaches and use various colors as the most important medium throughout her artistic works. She also inspires from all the encounters she had in the daily life with people and objects and transform these into the visual works.

Billy Lyons’s artwork has always had the theme of his childhood, involving drug abuse and domestic violence. “Sharing my experiences of being born cocaine positive, living in poverty, and being exposed to addiction and domestic violence through my paintings helps me to connect to my audience. Painting and mixed media are my passions, focusing on creating autobiographical narratives about my upbringing. I tend to paint dark subject matter with loud playful colors, creating imagery that is almost juvenile. The idea behind painting this way helps connect my work to my memories of my adolescence while also creating an uncomfortable contrast.”

Emily Manning-Mingle is a multi-disciplinary artist and educator. She completed a five-year BFA/MFA program in Painting and Studio Teaching at Boston University between 2009-2010, and in 2020 she returned to BU to pursue her MFA in Painting. Her interests include beauty, intimacy, collecting, archiving, and mending. Her work has been exhibited in Massachusetts, New York, Texas, North Carolina, Mississippi, and Italy. She has received several awards, including the Foundation for an Open America Painting Award, Best in Show at the Mosesian Center, and a President’s Scholarship from Anderson Ranch. In the summer of 2019, she was an artist-in-resident at Gallery263 in Cambridge, MA.

Agustina Markez, Desde Lejos Weaving, 16mm film strips, decorative stitches with red thread, 36 x 24 in., 2021

Agustina Markez is an Argentinian immigrant artist, based in Providence, RI. She received a Bachelor of Science in Visual Arts at SUNY Purchase, and is currently an MFA Sculpture candidate at Rhode Island School of Design. Her works in installation, sculpture, video and performance examine the way technology, constructed environments and home can merge.

James Morningstar’s artwork examines different aspects of personal identity, perception, and acts “as a vestibule for me to better understand the world around me. I use material and technical studies, research, and making to express myself, and my questions for the world at large. Identity, transformation, and curiosity have always been a part of this practice, which was largely developed as a method of distilling and processing information, no matter how light or traumatic. My visual arts are very influenced by my queer identity, worldviews, and a yearning to supply others with the feelings they may have tucked away.”

Meghan Murray is an MFA Painting candidate at Boston University. Born and raised in Massachusetts, Murray has been passionate about art-making since childhood. After graduating cum laude from Skidmore College, she completed the year-long Emerson Umbrella residency in Concord, MA. Murray then worked as an art educator while maintaining a rigorous independent studio practice. Her most recent work is a continued investigation into intergenerational American ideals and clichés as viewed in the mid-century family photo album. Murray’s fascination with nostalgia and sentimentality continues to be integral to the work.

Chen Peng (b. 1989) is a Taiwanese artist currently based in Boston. She received her BFA in Painting from Cleveland Institute of Art in 2016 and her BA in Philosophy from National Taiwan University in 2012. Chen’s works have been shown in the US and Taiwan, including a solo show at Art Taipei, awarded by the Ministry of Culture- Taiwan. She has participated in residency programs at The Studios at MASS MoCA and Vermont Studio Center. Her paintings have been included in several public collections including Cleveland Institute of Art, MetroHealth Cleveland, University Hospitals, and Fidelity Corporate Art Collection, among others. Chen is currently an MFA candidate in Painting at Boston University.


Abby Preshong, I’m Gonna Put You Underwater, Inkjet print, 19 x 16 in., 2021

Abby Preshong is a photographer based in Boston, Massachusetts. She is currently a senior attending Massachusetts College of Art and Design in Boston for her BFA in Photography. Abby found her passion through photographing music shows, musicians, and other artists. Her current work experiments with self-reflection and the desire to alter aspects of life and actuality. Focusing on anxiety, mental health and the relation it has to the self-destructive nature of human beings.

Stephen Proski (b. 1988) currently lives and works in Boston, Massachusetts. He received his BFA in Painting and Creative Writing from the Kansas City Art Institute in 2010 and is currently pursuing an MFA in Painting at Boston University. His work has been shown nationally and internationally, with exhibitions spanning Chicago, New York, and Russia. Recently, he was commissioned to create a permanent installation for the Kansas City Museum.

Stephanie Van Riet holds a BA in Studio Art and Anthropology from Connecticut College and is currently working towards a Post-Baccalaureate certificate in Fine Art from Brandeis University. Her current art practice incorporates her experience in conservation and exploration of culture, as she reacts to the world around her through her prints, paintings and paper sculpture. She has taught various art mediums at the Philly Art Center in Philadelphia, PA and at the Charles River Creative Arts Program in MA. In addition to teaching, Van Riet has worked at many art institutions including the Philadelphia Museum of Art, Lyman Allyn Museum of Art in New London, CT, Zullo Gallery in Medfield, MA and The Print Center in Philadelphia, PA.

Malia Setalsingh was born and raised in Miami Florida and currently reside in Boston Massachusetts. “I started painting in 2018 at Artist For Humanity, I am currently working in my space in Mattapan. I am inspired by music and everyday living in Boston. I have previously shown work at Boston’s Epicenter and at Montserrat College of Art. My main focus is creativity and I'm driven by the opportunity to inspire others through my work. After completing my first year at Montserrat my focus has been to continue to develop my work and find opportunities that help me grow as an artist.”

Kathryn Shiber, Bleeding in the Pasta Aisle, Graphite, watercolor and pen on paper, 24 x 30 in., 2020

Kathryn Shiber was born and raised in New Jersey. Shiber's playful and inventive drawings, paintings, photos, and textiles have been exhibited at galleries and art shows across the United States, including The Other Art Fair, Brooklyn; Art in the Time of Corona, Dab Art Gallery, Los Angeles (publication on permanent collection at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art); What is Real?, The Real House, Brooklyn; and the National Water Media Juried Exhibition, Dallas, TX. She received a B.A. in Studio Art from Dartmouth College, where she was the recipient of the Robert Read Prize for Outstanding Achievement in the Graphic Arts and the William C. Yakovak 1947 Scholarship for the Creative Arts.

Jingqi Steinhiser grew up as the only child in a family of diplomats: a performative image of rigid formality, a performance that mutated across geography. “Born in China, I lived in Russia, Mongolia, Korea, and ultimately, the USA. My aesthetic world was, thus, constructed on an unsettled foundation of dissonant cultures. In 2020. I received my BFA from the School of the Arts Institute Chicago and am now an MFA candidate at Rhode Island School of Design. Further, in 2020, I was awarded the residency at Ox-bow School of art with Merit Scholarship.”

Scott Vander Veen was born in Michigan and is currently pursuing his MFA at RISD. Though he is technically a student in the painting program, his practice relies on a background in sculpture, and he has dipped his toes into the pool of video art and text based art as well. He is a graduate of Bard college, where he honed his free-wheeling, interdisciplinary sensibility. After graduating, he lived for nearly three years as a Core Fellow at the Penland School of Craft in North Carolina where he continued to refine the materially oriented approach that is essential to his practice.

Dualisms

Curated by David Guerra
March 4 - March 27, 2016
Opening Reception: Friday, March 4, 2016 5 9 p.m.

Abigail Ogilvy Gallery is proud to present Dualisms, a group show curated by David Guerra.

Dualisms is a collective exhibition exploring a multiplicity of interpretations of dualism. The artists address conceptual divisions between opposing ideas, and thoughts on the quality of being dual. Some of the conflicts explored in their work include: man and nature, mind and matter, body and soul, cause and effect, image and reflection, identity and perception, reality and illusion.

Dualisms

A. David Guerra is a lawyer, photographer and independent curator based in Boston. His work reflects the diverse themes he dives into: people, their stories and places. He has exhibited in Boston, Provincetown and Paris. In 2014, he was mentored by Magnum Arts photographer, David Alan Harvey in Provincetown. David is also the founder of Darkroom, a platform to display photography using unconventional forms at alternative spaces and combining photography with other artistic expressions.

Featuring:

Daniel Barreto
Daniel Barreto is a School of the Museum of Fine Arts graduate who studies the interaction between humans and nature by using technology to create representations of imagery found in nature. His work has been featured internationally, most recently at Beijing’s Yuan Art Museum’s exhibition, “Neither Here Nor There”.

Daniel Barreto

Hannah Bates
Hannah Bates is a School of the Museum of Fine Arts graduate student and a member of the MIT Graduate Consortium of Women’s Studies. Her most recent series, Synthetic, places its subjects before murals to create the optical illusion of three-dimensional space, presenting the images in parts of a reality that can never be completely true, disrupting the idea of the whole. Her work has been featured at galleries nationally, including The Mission Hill Gallery in Somerville, MA.

Lizzy Dargie
Lizzy Dargie is a Somerville-based printmaker and illustrator, whose work explores the natural world, with close examinations of plants and insects through various printmaking techniques. Her work has been featured across New England, including the Piano Craft Gallery in Boston, MA.

Eben Haines
Eben Haines is a Massachusetts College of Art and Design-trained painter who deconstructs the classic subject of portraiture and human figure in ways that brings out the complex and chaotic aspects of their inner life. The object, the artist, and image present themselves simultaneously in his work, through layers of paint that cover and uncover the image in ways that reveal the artists hand and emphasize the history and emotional journey of the subject. His work has been featured across New England, most recently in “Your Ticket Out” at the Distillery Gallery in Boston, MA.

Kelly Knapp
Kelly Knapp is a versatile designer with a Masters in Landscape Architecture from The Rhode Island School of Design. Her fine art sculptures reflect different elements of her diverse background in architecture, both built and interior, fashion design, installation, and graphic design. Her work has been featured at galleries and art fairs throughout the Northeast, most recently at the Affordable Art Fair in Chelsea, NY.

Ryan C. McMahon
Ryan C. McMahon is a photographer, installation, and performance artist whose work studies art as a medium to transmit pain through various methods of representation, examining the complex relationship and discourse between society and trauma. Her work has been featured in galleries throughout the Northeast, most recently at Catamount Arts in St. Johns, VT.

Will Russack
A graduate of the School of the Museum of Fine Arts and Tufts University’s combined degree program, Will Russack has both a BFA in photography and a BS in environmental studies. His work addresses the relationship between nature and mankind, and the way humans attempt to control nature but also be a part of it. Using both traditional and digital photography, he captures the places where natural and manmade elements intersect, at times fighting for dominance, and at times existing harmoniously. His work has been featured in galleries nationally, most recently at the Anderson Ranch Arts Center in Snowmass, CO.

The Safarani Sisters
The Safarani Sisters are is a pair of Iranian twins who are currently attending Northeastern University and the School of the Museum of Fine Arts’ combined degree program. Their work combines classical painting and video to create atmospheric, meditative pieces that play with the ambiguity of reality, with ghosts of an alternate world walking through their paintings. Their work has been featured internationally, most recently at the Yuan Art Museum in Beijing, China.

Stefan Volatile-Wood
Stefan Volatile-Wood is a Massachusetts College of Art and Design graduate whose pieces bring together disparate images to create unexpected new wholes, juxtaposing them in ways that can be both jarring and harmonious—a “visual remix”. His work has been featured in galleries across New England, most recently in “Abstracted” at Uforge Gallery in Jamaica Plain, MA.

 

Wednesday, March 2, 2016: Puloma Ghosh

Artist Interview: The Safarani Sisters on Performance Art

Performance art is a form of fine art that has had a notable role in many artistic movements in the twentieth century. It has been a way to express ideas without the limitations presented by traditional two- and three-dimensional mediums, vital to radical artistic movements and conveying emotional and political messages.

The Safarani Sisters are twins hailing from the University of Tehran in Iran who are completing their graduate studies in Boston at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts and Northeastern University. They are traditionally trained painters who began exploring new mediums, which led them to video and eventually, performance. In 2015, they performed Cocoon in the Plaza Black Box at the Boston Center for the Arts.

The Safarani Sisters performing "Cocoon" at the Boston Center for the Arts

The Safarani Sisters performing "Cocoon" at the Boston Center for the Arts

In this interview, they explain the reason an artist may choose the medium of performance, and what we, as the audience, can experience with a performance that is unique to other forms of art.

How did you transition from traditional painters to performance artists?

We did our undergrad in the University of Tehran. During that time we were helping other people with their performances in the theatre department. Because we were painters, we could do painting for scenes and décor.

We started doing more experimental work from there. Then when we came [to Boston], we incorporated video with painting. Because we had some background in performance and video art, we started making our own individual videos. We did a performance called “Cocoon”, and it was very successful, which encouraged us to do more with performance and video art.

What was the story of Cocoon?

Cocoon is the story of a person who turns into herself, like a butterfly forming in a cocoon. She is tangled inside her apartment—all of the shots are inside of her room. She doesn’t want to come out because she doesn’t want to contact the world around her before learning who she is through herself.

We made a video of this, and with ourselves as the subject. The video is about one hour, and we performed it in a black box in the Boston Center for the Arts. We had live music—six musicians watching the video and playing impromptu. On the stage, we were both sitting and sewing a very long tulle as if it is the cocoon she is sewing for herself, and at the end of the video I started to wrap my sister in that tulle on stage. Because we are twins, people will think that these two subjects of the performance are one subject, which means that I have been sewing this cocoon for myself, and at the end I wrap it around myself.

Why did you choose to tell this story through performance?

We didn’t want to do a performance just to do a performance; we thought that the most effective way to tell our story was by performing it. The subject is the most important thing you have to think about. What form of art can tell that story better? We still do painting and videos, but when we have a subject that we can’t do through painting or video, we do performance. We think that there are different forms of art, and everything is meant for a specific statement.

cocoon.jpg

You also have to know the audience in the context. What makes performance different is that when we were performing in the black box, the audience was very engaged with what was happening on the stage. We created an atmosphere of a very dark place that people could imagine that they were also within. It was more mental. The concept was “cocoon”, so we thought if we performed that in a black box, people would feel like they were also in a cocoon, and could better understand the subject.

The Safarani Sisters performing Orpheus (2010)

The Safarani Sisters performing Orpheus (2010)

What draws you to performance art as a medium?

It’s a temporary context: a specific moment for the audience to experience a personal connection. There was a moment in our performance of Cocoon that was fifteen minutes, only me and my sister gazing at each other—a connection that could not be captured. Sharing and engaging the audience in this creates a beautiful moment with them. Then that moment disappears when the performance is over.

What can we look forward to from you in the future?

We have another video performance coming up that is different from Cocoon, called The Extent, which we are hoping to get a venue for. The video is almost complete; it is filmed in Iran. The Extent continues from Cocoon and follows the narrative of the same character. The subject of Cocoon was a woman who turned to herself in order to know herself without being distracted by the world. In The Extent she comes out of her cocoon and walks to explore the world. She is upset to find that life is a short journey just from womb to tomb.  Thousands of questions come to her mind regarding the fact that people are fighting on the earth, and for what reasons. To depict this narrative, we have filmed the subject in two different places. One is the cemetery where there are thousands of empty tombs waiting to be filled with people, and the other is the roof of a building where the texture of other buildings looks like the cemetery, filled with the people who are going to fill the tombs. Birth to death is just a moment between womb and tomb, and it is never worth depriving each other of this beautiful moment just to have a bit more space to stand.

Come meet the Safarani Sisters and view their video paintings at the opening for Abigail Ogilvy Gallery's group show, Dualisms on Friday, March 4, 2015 from 5 p.m. – 9 p.m.

 

Wednesday, March 2, 2016: Puloma Ghosh