Patricia Cronin. Shrine for Girls

Dal 6 May 2015 al 22 November 2015
Venezia
Luogo: Chiesa di San Gallo
Indirizzo: San Marco 1103
Curatori: Ludovico Pratesi
E-Mail info: melissa@suttonpr.com
Sito ufficiale: http://www.shrineforgirls.org
A Collateral Event for La Biennale di Venezia 56. Esposizione Internazionale d’Arte .
Although the United Nations passed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948, women and girls around the world continue to be among the most vulnerable members of our global society. Often facing violence, repression, and enforced ignorance, this young female populace is subjected to a horrifying existence on earth.
Inside the exquisite 16th-century Church of San Gallo, where Bill Viola showed in 2007, New York-based conceptual artist Patricia Cronin has created a shrine in their honor. For over two decades, critically acclaimed artist Patricia Cronin has created compelling works, many with social justice themes focusing on gender. Here, she has gathered hundreds of girls' clothes from around the world and arranged them on three stone altars to act as relics of these young martyrs. Commemorating their spirit, this dramatic site-specific installation is a meditation on the incalculable loss of unrealized potential and hopelessness in the face of unfathomable human cruelty; juxtaposed against the obligation and mission we have as citizens of the world to combat this prejudice.
The central altar exhibits brightly colored saris worn by girls in India, three of who were recently gang raped, murdered and left to hang from trees. The left altar displays hijabs representing the 276 schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram in Nigeria. And the third altar presents a pile of aprons and uniforms symbolizing those worn by girls at the Magdalene Asylums and Laundries, forced labor institutions for young women without options in Ireland, the United Kingdom and the United States as recently as 1996. A small framed photograph from each of these three tragic events will accompany each sculpture proposing a new and reflective dialogue between gender, memory and justice.
Patricia Cronin
Cronin has presented one-person exhibitions at the Musei Capitolini's Centrale Montemartini Museo and the American Academy in Rome, Italy; and the Brooklyn Museum, Deitch Projects, Brent Sikkema, White Columns, and Woodlawn Cemetery, New York, and ConnerSmith, Washington, DC, among others.
She is the recipient of numerous awards, including the prestigious Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome; Civitella Ranieri Fellowship, Louis Comfort Tiffany Fellowship and two Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grants. Her works are in numerous collections including Deutsche Bank, New York; National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, the Perez Art Museum Miami, FL and Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow, Scotland. She has taught in the Graduate Art Programs at both Columbia University and Yale University and is currently Professor of Art at Brooklyn College of The City University of New York as well as a trustee of the American Academy in Rome.
Major support is provided by Lead Sponsors, The FLAG Art Foundation and The Fuhrman Family Foundation.
Although the United Nations passed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights in 1948, women and girls around the world continue to be among the most vulnerable members of our global society. Often facing violence, repression, and enforced ignorance, this young female populace is subjected to a horrifying existence on earth.
Inside the exquisite 16th-century Church of San Gallo, where Bill Viola showed in 2007, New York-based conceptual artist Patricia Cronin has created a shrine in their honor. For over two decades, critically acclaimed artist Patricia Cronin has created compelling works, many with social justice themes focusing on gender. Here, she has gathered hundreds of girls' clothes from around the world and arranged them on three stone altars to act as relics of these young martyrs. Commemorating their spirit, this dramatic site-specific installation is a meditation on the incalculable loss of unrealized potential and hopelessness in the face of unfathomable human cruelty; juxtaposed against the obligation and mission we have as citizens of the world to combat this prejudice.
The central altar exhibits brightly colored saris worn by girls in India, three of who were recently gang raped, murdered and left to hang from trees. The left altar displays hijabs representing the 276 schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram in Nigeria. And the third altar presents a pile of aprons and uniforms symbolizing those worn by girls at the Magdalene Asylums and Laundries, forced labor institutions for young women without options in Ireland, the United Kingdom and the United States as recently as 1996. A small framed photograph from each of these three tragic events will accompany each sculpture proposing a new and reflective dialogue between gender, memory and justice.
Patricia Cronin
Cronin has presented one-person exhibitions at the Musei Capitolini's Centrale Montemartini Museo and the American Academy in Rome, Italy; and the Brooklyn Museum, Deitch Projects, Brent Sikkema, White Columns, and Woodlawn Cemetery, New York, and ConnerSmith, Washington, DC, among others.
She is the recipient of numerous awards, including the prestigious Rome Prize from the American Academy in Rome; Civitella Ranieri Fellowship, Louis Comfort Tiffany Fellowship and two Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grants. Her works are in numerous collections including Deutsche Bank, New York; National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, the Perez Art Museum Miami, FL and Kelvingrove Art Gallery and Museum, Glasgow, Scotland. She has taught in the Graduate Art Programs at both Columbia University and Yale University and is currently Professor of Art at Brooklyn College of The City University of New York as well as a trustee of the American Academy in Rome.
Major support is provided by Lead Sponsors, The FLAG Art Foundation and The Fuhrman Family Foundation.
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