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To a first-time visitor, facing the Carpenter Center’s bleak concrete
facade may be a bit daunting, but once on the fourth floor, entering
the “Post-Brush” microcosm means embracing a captivating fantasia of
color, chaos, and creation.
With students working against the deadline for their first
project in Visual and Environmental Studies 123r: “Post-Brush: Studio
Course,” Professor Annette Lemieux circled the classroom last Monday,
commenting, guiding, and challenging students’ beliefs about the
correct way to make their ideas into art.
Talent and creativity abounded as she walked through the
room—on her left, fresh prints hung drying on the walls, on her right,
rows of tables covered in paint, prints, and paper shreds. All the
while, she climbed over discarded endeavors, abandoned haphazardly on
the floor in artistic frustration.
Yet there is more to the class than experimentation. Rather,
Lemieux strives to expand students’ notions of boundaries in creative
expression to a more interactive, personal level. By integrating
different types of media—images, texts, or objects—found in pop culture
into customary art forms, students also explore a new medium of
experimental creation.
“Post Brush is different from other art classes in that you
can apply printing to painting and sculpture—[students] aren’t just
printing, they are making art,” Lemieux says.
A Harvard professor since 1996, Lemieux is not only
enthusiastic but approachable—a critical personality trait in this
small, interactive environment. Most of all, she is passionate about
art, the classes she teaches, and her students, always encouraging them
to push toward a higher valence of aesthetic representation. This drive
for creative and original expression came through in her students’
diverse approaches to the first project.
J.T. Keeley ’07, for example, rooted his project in visual
realism. Keeley began by photographing recognizable images from
television, like Oprah and Judge Judy. Photocopying these images onto
acid tape and imposing them onto a silk screen prepared him for his
final step: fixing them onto cubes representing the television screen
from which they originally came.
“An overarching meaning is not always necessary. [The project] is just a visual representation of reality,” says Keeley.
Other projects, however, used the artistic form to scrutinize
society. Cailin M. O’Connor ’06 explored the realm of feminism by
printing vivid and even shocking images of women—ranging from the
classical nude to the bonded victim—on ripped, square pieces of white
textiles. She also combined these prints with a multi-colored, abstract
drip technique and chose to present the pieces by leaving them
scattered on the floor of the studio, accompanied by a photograph of a
similarly random arrangement on the asphalt of a parking lot.
Other students’ projects grew out of intense personal
experience. Chloe L. Stinetorf ’06 drew on the trauma her family
experienced when her brother toured Iraq with the Marines, creating
dozens of chilling prints where content and color blend in perfect
harmony. In the background of some prints are maps of the Middle East;
in others, astronomical maps of constellations which resemble bombing
targets. Bright, iconic images and words, such as American flags, guns,
cannons, excerpts of ee cummings’ poetry, and the words “Semper
Fidelis” (“always faithful”), are superimposed upon the maps. Yet these
prints are only a part of Stinetorf’s family’s larger effort to make a
quilt and tapestry incorporating these images. Although such
collaborative work is not common, it is regarded as an integral aspect
of the project and thus permitted.
Lemieux affirms, “I want to see something new every day. That’s what keeps teaching exciting.”
In that case, her students in Post-Brush seem particularly
suited to her tastes. The class is, after all, not only a group of
artists, but also one of adventurers constantly working outside
conventional boundaries and experiencing a new, individual form of
creative expression.
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