Rosemary Meza-DesPlas
nevertheless, She Persisted
Live Wall Drawing: January 23 – February 1
Soft Opening: February 2
Exhibit Reception: March 2, 5-7pm
EXHIBITION DATES:
February 2–March 3, 2018
LIVE WALL DRAWING:
January 23 – February 1
SOFT OPENING:
Friday, February 2, 2018
RECEPTION:
Friday, March 2 at 5-7pm
Spoken Word Performance by Rosemary at 6pm
Barbara Conrad Gallery Hours:
Tuesday – Saturday
10am – 5pm
Entry to Durango Arts Center galleries is always free. The galleries are closed to the public on Sundays and Mondays.
ABOUT THE SHOW
The personalization of social issues in a serial format is the framework for my artwork. Societal impositions upon body image, transformative perspectives about women and violence, and the socio-cultural burdens endured by women are the most recently explored topics. Social issues are viewed through a multifarious lens of mass media, social media and art history.
Wispy, curling tendrils, wiry, frizzy ends stitch through a picture plane to create images; I collect and sew my own hair into drawings which accentuate line and texture. Scratchy, nervous lines trail across a wall in my drawing installations. These large, on-site installations are drawn with conte; sometimes they incorporate vinyl appliques, liquid graphite and specialty fabric. Voluptuous layers of watercolor stain canvas and paper to create figurative forms. Washes of color depict the imperfections of flesh. The depiction of flesh is not merely about accuracy for color and form, but it is about having an eye for the bump — and the lump– and the chunk of blemished flesh.
“The body – what we eat, how we dress, the daily rituals through which we attend the body- is a medium of culture. The body, as anthropologist Mary Douglas has argued, is a powerful symbolic form, a surface on which the central rules, hierarchies, and even metaphysical commitments of a culture are inscribed and thus reinforced through the concrete language of the body.” (Susan Bordo, Unbearable Weight Feminism, Western Culture, and the Body, 1993) I examine gender role expectations and prevailing stereotypes in mass media through the lens of socio-cultural structures.
WALL DRAWING INSTALLATION
ARTIST WORKSHOP
Non-Traditional Approaches to the Drawing Process with Rosemary Meza-DesPlas
February 24, 2:00 – 5:00pm
Members – $70 / General – $90
Drawing is a democratic process because it can be done easily without expensive tools by a child or an adult. It is merely the process of making a mark. There are various traditional media utilized in drawing for mark-making such as pencils, charcoal, conte, chalk pastels; however, the language of mark-making is expansive and includes non-traditional instruments as well. This workshop will focus on innovative approaches to the drawing process: the physicality of drawing will be stressed – the pull, push and drag of a mark-making tool across a surface. Participants will be using a variety of non-traditional tools to create finished artworks. A combination of wet and dry media will be utilized in this workshop. The emphasis will be on the visual element of line. Line has the potential to convey direction, texture, and emotion; it can imply value, suggest motion, define boundaries and imply volume. In considering the unlimited potentiality of drawing as a medium, it is recommended participants look at artwork by the following artists: Vik Muniz, Rebecca Carter, Monika Grzymala and Il Lee.









