Saturday, December 7, 2013

Event Blog 3: "What Comes to Mind" Exhibit Opening with Remarks from Joyce Cutler-Shaw

This past Thursday, I visited Joyce Cutler-Shaw’s exhibit entitled “What Comes to Mind” in UCLA’s ART|SCI Gallery.  In the dimly lit room packed to capacity with UCLA students, I found it difficult to immerse myself in the art due to the distractions of my surroundings.  After a few minutes, I began to look at some of the work displayed and immediately became enthralled.

Picture of me next to photographs of skeletons framed inside images of a brain scan.

A series of photographs on the northern wall of the exhibit depicted different locales in New York’s Upper West Side.  The descriptions that accompanied the pictures explained the artist’s relationship with her mother and hometown, and how the locations in the photographs were significant to the memory of her mother.  The photographs were framed inside the image of a woman’s face, adding further to the collection's theme of the mind and memory.  It is interesting to note that acknowledgement of her mother’s death as a passage led Cutler-Shaw to the laboratories at UCSD School of Medicine, to study the natural phenomena of death and life.

Example of the frame with image of woman’s face from the exhibit.

About fifteen minutes into the exhibition opening, Cutler-Shaw was asked to say a few words about her work as Artist in Residence at UCSD’s School of Medicine.  She mentioned that 4 unique experiences with death (one of which was her mother’s), led her to approach the dean of the medical school to spend time drawing cadavers.  Cutler-Shaw believed it was very important to have respect for the cadaver she drew, and her mentality was that it was not about her, but rather it was about the cadaver.

After her talk, I spent a little more time exploring the exhibit, this time focusing on her work with anatomy.  I was very interested in her drawings of skeletons, limbs, and other body parts.  One drawing of a skeleton and its shadow really brought the idea of a skeleton to life.  Although we often think of skeletons as what lies under our bones, we don’t often see one in person because it lies under our skin.  However, Cutler-Shaw made it clear that a skeleton is very real and it too casts a shadow.

One of Culter-Shaw’s drawings of a skeleton and its shadow.


The exhibit as a whole put the studies of memory and anatomy in a different light.  Memory represents things that were, and anatomy represents things that are.

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