Sat, Aug 30, 2008

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DAILY SHVITZ
What's this art about, sir?

SkintimatesSkintimatesStigmaStigmaYou're My FlameYou're My FlameLate into the night on G-chat, me and artist Genevive Zacconi bitch about our hair and the gallery world in equal measure. Her constant refrain is that very few people understand her conceptual, classically painted art.

So, Jewcy readers, here's your chance to prove your superiority to art world movers and shakers. Tell me what Genevive's work means.

And no, it's not a wombat.


Molly Crabapple is a New York artist, the author of Dr. Sketchy's Official Rainy Day Colouring Book, and the founder of an art


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Joey Kurtzman


A mani/pedi as crucifixion

Stigma: "upper middle-class chicks must struggle so tirelessly to be cute and well-manicured yet also cool and sexy and all that shit; it's such a passion play, such agony, that, why, it makes us just like Jesus, all writhing about on our own girly cross...JC Penney, JC Penney, why have you forsaken me?"





Anonymous


RE: A mani/pedi as crucifixion

I didn't know JC Penny started selling pleather 8" stiletto stripper shoes!!! But, then again, I dont go there very often. I guess I also dont travel enough in the circles of well manicured, upper middle-class "chicks" to see the coorelation between the imagery in my painting, and women of that lifestyle.

The blog's auhthor, Molly Crabapple, had previously done an interview with me inwhich I talked about my inspiration behind that painting, here it is:

"MC: Does your past ever lead people to take you less seriously?

GZ: Unfortunately, may answer to your question is YES. My painting,
"Stigma", is about this very issue. I have found that women who have
had a "questionable" past, dress seductively, or just embrace their
own sexuality, often times have a harder time being taken seriously
for their intellect or talent, and are many times persecuted to the
point of social crucifixion. Hence why the painting, of a woman's feet
adorned with dark toenail polish, tattoos, and patent leather heels,
is called "Stigma" (meaning a mark of infamy or disgrace or sign of
moral blemish); instead of the obvious "Stigmata" (the term for the
crucifixion wounds on the feet in the painting)."

-Genevive Zacconi





Joey Kurtzman


JC Penney as God

Yeah, that was totally the point about the JC Penney thing: Jesus cried out "Eloi eloi, lama sabachtani" at the end of his struggle on the cross because he yearned for Dad's love and protection, but it wasn't available. Instead, he was left to writhe on a cross fashioned for him by men. Similarly, the woman in your photo is at that very moment crying out for the ease and comfort of a pair of sensible JC Penney tennies. Alas, they are not available to her, because like Jesus she's been left to writhe on a cross fashioned by men: in her case the soul-grinding pursuit of the latest to die-for set of hip stilettoed open-toed shoes or other equivalent sexycool thingies.

I see now that you intended the outfit as "questionable" (ie. "slutty") rather than sexy, but this will hardly have been the first time that a man had difficulty distinguishing these two. 

Incidentally, your tone suggests that you think I was trying to criticize the photograph. I wasn't at all. I like it a great deal, I think it's interesting. That's why I answered Molly Q about what we thought it meant. 





Molly Crabapple


Quick note

Hey Joey,

Those are oil paintings, not photo.  Genevive's just a really good painter.

-M 





Joey Kurtzman


Yes, the gaping wounds

Yes, the gaping wounds should have given that away. I guess I thought the middle one was a photo upon which she'd worked some crazy artist voodoo. Kudos to her.





Anonymous


RE: JC Penney as God

I didn't think you were trying to critisize my art, so much as the type of woman you thought it was about. No offence taken personally :) My point was just that it wasnt so much about the fashion stuggles of upper middle class chicks, as it was a statement on how sexual women are still wearing a scarlet letter of sorts.

Thanks for the compliment on my work!

Genevive





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