![]() Cynthia
Madansky’s
exhibition consists of work from three separate series. The series
entitled Torture depicts instruments used
during the Spanish Inquisition. These bold graphic depictions resulted
from the artist’s fascination with these intricately designed and
detailed instruments. Their jewel-like quality both fascinates and repels:
the seductive coloration and bold line quality contrasting with the disturbing
quality of the content. These devices were used on anyone deemed a heretic
during that period. This religious connection as well as the theme of
torture seems to resonate once again as we find ourselves in the midst
of a war between west and east, religions and regions. The Wyoming series
of unframed drawings map out land being usurped for oil drilling by the
major corporations. These lyrical drawings tell the story of land and
its appropriation, tracing the vestiges of places that people have come
to call home. These ‘maps’ have less to do with cartography
and more to do with the tracing of histories through line and form, interpreting
the land through their geopolitical histories. The third series of drawings
explores the effect on our bodies of destroying “the other.” These
are drawings in a storyboard format from the artist’s Public Service
Announcement (PSA) film no. 15 entitled Skin. The PSA project
is an ongoing series of short films which protest the American occupation
of Iraq and the act of war. Also included is a video projection of PSA
No. 7: Anthem, whichwas made in collaboration with Brad Wolfley
and Elle Flanders, music composed by Zeena Parkins. Cynthia
Madansky’s
films have shown at the Museum of Modern Art and at international art
spaces and festivals. Her drawings and paintings have been exhibited
in New York, Caracas, Copenhagen and Toronto. She currently resides
in New York and is working on the script for a feature film called A Death In Chinatown, a short dance film titled Quartet and
an experimental documentary about the Center for Free Thought in Khan
Younis, Gaza. She received an MFA from the Mason Gross School of Art,
Rutgers, New Jersey, attended the Cooper School of Art and the Whitney
Independent Study Program in New York, and attended the Bezalel Academy
of Art in Jerusalem. |
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