Dianne Hebbert, The Significance of motherhood

Kung sino tayo: Values Walking Tour — May

Ang Y's Norman E. Ipinagmamalaki ni Alexander Center for Jewish Life na ipakita ang Sino Tayo: Mga Halaga ng Walking Tour, pagpapakita ng mga lokal na artista na kumakatawan sa ibang makataong halaga bawat buwan.

Ito ang aming layunin, sa gitna ng COVID-19 na katotohanan, upang i-promote ang mga lokal na artista at mag-alok sa komunidad ng Northern Manhattan ng access sa sining. Bagama't karaniwan ay gusto naming ipakita ang sining na ito sa mga dingding ng Y, sa kasalukuyang mga limitasyong nauugnay sa COVID, layunin namin na dalhin ang aming mga lokal na artista sa mga lansangan ng aming komunidad.

Mayo: Honor

The Significance of Motherhood, 2020, Gold leaf, fabric and flashe paint on plexi, 20”x 20

The Only Thing that Matters, 2020, Gold leaf, paper and paint marker on plexi,
15″ x 17”

By Dianne Hebbert
diannehebbert.cominstagram.com/diannehebbert

Dianne Hebbert is a Nicaraguan-American artist and curator. She works primarily in painting, printmaking and installation art. As a Miami native she attended New World School of the Arts before she earned her BFA in Painting and Drawing from Purchase College and her MFA in Printmaking from Brooklyn College. Hebbert is a recipient of the Vermont Studio Center Fellowship and residency, she was selected as a Smack Mellon Hot Pick Artist in 2017 and an Emerging Leader of New York Arts 2016-2017 Fellow. Hebbert has completed residencies at Trestle Art Space, Constance Saltonstall Foundation for the Arts and is currently a Chashama Space to Connect artist.

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

Celebrating Mother’s day this month, within the thought frame of the value
‘Honor’ in mind, Dianne Hebbert’s work is celebrating the Honoring of Motherhood in its most profound way. Creating work about lineage, family values and reproduction, Dianne’s mixed-media paintings speak to multigenerational maternal care. As a first generation American, Hebbert reflects on her family’s Nicaraguan culture and traditions, and how those translate and reproduce in her American life experience. She desires to preserve those traditions inherited from her ancestors, and continue them in the family she creates. In the Works ‘The Significance of Motherhood’ and ‘The Only Thing That Matters’, Dianne incorporates gold as a symbol of value, perfection and worth into her figures, thus reaffirming and empowering Mother-Daughter relationship. These paintings are mementos of unconditional maternal love.

HONOR

Ni Rabbi Ari Perten, Norman E. Alexander Center para sa Direktor ng Buhay ng Hudyo

The Latin phrase nomen omen suggests that something’s name gives insight into its essence. Such a statement is certainly true for the concept of honor. In hebrew the word honor כבוד (kavod) comes from the root כ.ב.ד (k.v.d) meaning weighty or heavy. The diametric opposite is the word for curse, קלל (klala) which comes from the Hebrew root ק.ל (k.l.) meaning light. An implicit message from this etymology is that to honor someone means to treat them with due and deserved seriousness. While to curse someone is to treat them lightly. Conceptually, such an assertion is not terribly challenging. Intellectually it is easy to espouse the value that every person is deserving of honor, that every person deserves to be taken seriously. Yet our lived experience so often tells a different tale. Often we live in the margins, either exuberantly clinging to (and at times even magnifying) our own importance, o, the opposite seeing ourselves as unimportant, common, and meaningless. In both moments of extremes we would do well to remember that the value of honor insists on our essential substance. As people we are worth honor and such a statement is not uniquely limited to our existence. Observing pleasant sights, smelling an appealing odor, savoring a delicious taste all, almost naturally, elicit reflexive praise. If the inanimate can be deserving of such honor, how much the more so beings endowed with intelligence and understanding. How do you see honor in yourself and honor in others?

Tungkol sa Y
Itinatag sa 1917, ang YM&YWHA ng Washington Heights & Inwood (ang Y) ay ang pangunahing sentro ng komunidad ng mga Hudyo ng Northern Manhattan — naglilingkod sa magkakaibang etniko at sosyo-ekonomiko na nasasakupan — pagpapabuti ng kalidad ng buhay para sa mga tao sa lahat ng edad sa pamamagitan ng mga kritikal na serbisyong panlipunan at mga makabagong programa sa kalusugan, kagalingan, edukasyon, at katarungang panlipunan, habang isinusulong ang pagkakaiba-iba at pagsasama, at pag-aalaga sa mga nangangailangan.

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