Maffia Warrior Pose

我哋係邊個: Values Walking Tour — March

Y嘅諾曼·. Alexander Center for Jewish Life is proud to present the Who We Are: 價值觀步行之旅, showcasing local artists representing a different humanitarian value each month.

It is our goal, amidst a COVID-19 reality, to promote local artists and offer the Northern Manhattan community access to art. While normally we would like for this art to be shown on the walls of the Y, with the current COVID-related limitations, it is our goal to bring our local artists to the streets of our community.

三月: Freedom

Goddess Pose (2018)
Hand-Cut Silhouette on Paper, 10” x 8”

Warrior II Pose (2018)
Hand-Cut Silhouette on Paper, 10” x 8”

By Jessica Maffia
jessicamaffia.com  |  instagram.com/jessicamaffia 

Jessica Maffia is a visual artist born and raised in New York City. Her work has been exhibited throughout the US and is currently in the Flat Files of Pierogi Gallery in downtown Manhattan. Maffia created the artwork for musician Childish Gambino’s two singles “Summertime Magic” and “Feels Like Summer.” Her solo exhibition at Denise Bibro Fine Art in Chelsea featured her large, photorealistic pencil drawings of urban cracks and residue producing unexpectedly beautiful surfaces. Maffia is the recipient of 13 artist residency fellowships and two grants from the Hells Kitchen Foundation. Her work is featured on the covers of Fabio Gironi’s philosophy book, “Naturalizing Badiou: Mathematical Ontology and Structural Realism” and poet Firas Sulaiman’s latest book, “As if My Name is a Mistaken Sign.” The artist’s installation, Lanterns for Peace, was exhibited in various sites throughout the US in response to the 2016 presidential elections. Maffia worked live on her series of self-portraits at Spring Break Art Show in March 2018. She is currently working on a series of portraits of her non-human neighbors as well as her latest series, Walking Broadway: Signs of Nature on the Wickquasgeck Trail. She is looking forward to her artist residency at United Plant Savers in the Summer of 2021.

Curator’s Note By Gal Cohen
galcohenart.com  |  instagram.com/galshugon 

There are endless ways of thinking about Women’s History month, or rather Women’s HERstory month. The month is inherently about Freedom; freedom to vote, financial freedom, freedom to speak up, freedom of your own body, freedom to advocate and express oneself. When Nina Simone was asked what freedom meant to her, she replied “no fear.” This answer is strikingly resonant in its tangible and grounded essences, especially when thinking about intersectionality of womxn and added factors as race, class, gender, and disability. Jessica Maffia, an artist living and working in Washington Heights, uses her own body as a map on which she inscribes her inner landscape. In Maffia’s collages, she creates silhouettes of her body to render postures, such as Warrior II and Goddess Pose, adding a palpable emphasis on wxmanhood to them. The history of art is burdened by the representation of women made by men, for men. There is no better way to regenerate womxn history and work towards freedom than to visualize, tell, and write stories of womxn by womxn, for womxn.

Freedom

由拉比阿里佩滕, 諾曼E. 亞歷山大猶太生活中心主任

The concept of freedom is a foundational truth of the American ethos. In the Declaration of Independence, our country’s founders famously asserted the right to life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness. In our schools we regularly tell the story of those who emigrated to the US in hopes of securing freedom for themselves and their families. Even more recently, our nation has struggled as it has begun to face the troubling reality that freedom is not always equally applied.

As a concept, freedom is difficult. Does freedom suggest a freedom or a freedom Though related the two applications are conceptually unique. Freedom from, suggests that one is no longer reliant upon or obligated towards another. Freedom to, indicates an autonomy in decision making. When we speak of freedom, to which freedom do we referWhich freedom is the freedom of our most sacred belief?

A second complexity of freedom is based on the question of how does one obtain freedom. One approach suggests agency rests in the hands of the powerful — meaning that freedom can be granted but not achieved. A second approach asserts the opposite, freedom is not just physical but mental as well. As such, regardless of one’s physical state, freedom can only be reached when one who considers themselves as free. This second approach is reminiscent of the work of the 20th century psychiatrist Viktor Frankl. Frankl, a Holocaust survivor, wrote in his 1946 autobiographical work Man’s Search for Meaning, “Everything can be taken from a man but one thing: the last of the human freedoms — to choose one’s attitude in any given set of circumstances, to choose one’s own way.” Having now lived a full year in which our physical freedom has been limited by COVID-19 Frankl’s words offer much needed comfort. How will you celebrate your freedoms this month?
 

關於Y
建立於 1917, Ym&華盛頓高地嘅尤哈 & 恩伍德 (Y) 係曼哈頓北部首屈一指嘅猶太社區中心-服務於一個種族和社會經濟多樣化嘅選區-透過關鍵嘅社會服務同創新嘅健康計劃改善所有年齡段嘅人嘅生活質素-, 健康, 教育, 同社會正義, 同時促進多樣性和包容性, 照顧那些需要幫助嘅人.

社交或電子郵件共享

臉譜網
LinkedIn
電子郵件
打印