Alison Saar

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sculptor

Personal Information

Born February 5, 1956, in Los Angeles, California; daughter of Richard Saar (an art conservator and writer) and Betye Saar (a noted sculptor and installation artist).
Education: Scripps College, Claremont, California, B.A., 1978; Otis Art Institute, Los Angeles, M.F.A, 1981.
Religion: Unitarian.

Career

Noted sculptor, early 1980s?. Also worked extensively in other media. Exhibited work widely. Created large sculptures that addressed religious and historical themes, focusing on African- American and African cultures. Installation of 1995, Slow Boat, and other works of the 1990s included participation by viewers.

Life's Work

Summing up her art for a 1993 profile in Essence magazine, Alison Saar offered the words "refined savagery." The description aptly evoked the union of opposites so often achieved in Saar's works. Of multiracial heritage, Saar tackled both spiritual and political themes. Her patchwork sculptures, often covered in metal or brightly painted, have the feel of folk art, yet their solid elegance of form links them with the traditions of sculpture in Europe and the ancient world. Deeply influenced by African religion, Saar also produced striking works with Christian subjects. Saar's "refined savagery" ranges widely, yet leaves the viewer impressed with the artist's sense of herself as an individual.

Alison Saar is the daughter of another famous artist, the sculptor and installation artist Betye Saar. Mother and daughter share various tendencies in their work, including a fondness for found objects and materials like wood and sheet metal scraps, and an impulse toward distinctively African American forms of religious expression. Yet Alison attracted notice in her own right when her style diverged from that of her mother. She constructed large human figures which stood in strong contrast to Betye's typical productions: boxes and free-standing structures filled with an engaging variety of objects and designs. The two artists have collaborated on several projects, most notably on a 1990 joint exhibition, "Secrets, Dialogues, Revelations: The Art of Betye and Alison Saar."

Born in Los Angeles on February 5, 1956, Alison Saar was raised in an artistic environment created by both her parents. Much has been made of the influence of her mother--African, Native American, and Irish in ancestry--who gave her clay to play with and took her to see Simon Rodia's folk-art towers in the Watts neighborhood. Saar herself, however, also pointed to the impact of her father, Richard, a white art conservator and writer who took her to museums and asked her to help out in his workshop. It was through working with her father that Saar began to learn about different materials and about the art of various cultures. She also began to carve wood.

Saar enrolled at Scripps College in Claremont, California, outside Los Angeles, receiving her B.A. in 1978. She studied with Samella Lewis, a prominent black art historian, and wrote her senior thesis on African-American folk art. Saar moved on to the Master of Fine Arts program at the Otis Art Institute in Los Angeles, and it was in the final stages of her studies there that she began to forge a style independent of her mother's. Shortly before her thesis exhibition--a major scholastic hurdle during which a student received the most important evaluations of his or her work--she discarded the works she had planned to display, and, as curator Elizabeth Shepherd in the Secrets, Dialogues, Revelations: The Art of Betye and Alison Saar catalogue later put it, "rapidly produced a group of robust and coarsely carved sculptures inspired by her studies of folk art and her desire to make art she herself would want to own."

Although she produced works in other media, including drawings and frescoes, most of Saar's mature works are sizable sculptures of single African American figures, often carved from wood and partly assembled from discarded or commonplace materials such as tin. The patchwork (or "assemblage") technique and Saar's use of bold colors--particularly red, green, indigo, and yellow--suggested a folk art style. Her treatment of the human form has also been marked, though, by an orientation toward European sculpture noted in a New York Times review of a 1995 exhibition, but forecasted years before by Saar herself in an interview with Judith Wilson in the Secrets, Dialogues, Revelations: The Art of Betye and Alison Saar catalogue: "{I}f you look at one of the earliest pieces and then at the way they are now ... {my sculptures are} actually getting much more classical in their stances than they used to be."

Much of Saar's work has a religious aspect. Saar told Wilson that she attributed her spiritual nature to her upbringing in the Unitarian church: "The whole idea was there's always something, some sort of spirit power out there." Some of her sculptures depicted African or Afro-Caribbean religious figures such as shamans or preachers, and she constructed pieces that evoke altars and icons. Saar created appealing images of mythological figures that suggest a nature-centered spirituality: a blue-eyed 1986 "Snake Charmer" holds a green snake crosswise in his teeth. Although many of her works deal with African or Afro-Caribbean religion, Saar freely turned to Christian subjects as well, and in doing so she partakes of a mixture with deep roots in African American religious communities. A 1988 rendering of Lazarus, with rhinestones for wounds, carried overtones of the AIDS epidemic and of the lesions that afflict those suffering from the disease.

In addition to religion and myth, Saar addressed black culture and history more generally, and there is a political tinge to her work at times. Several pieces dealt with racism among blacks based on skin tone, and she told Essence that "Skin Deep," an embossed-tin human skin hanging on a wall at the prestigious 1993 Biennial exhibition mounted by the Whitney Museum in New York City, was inspired by the beating of Rodney King at the hands of members of the Los Angeles Police Department. One of Saar's most powerful political works was "Jesse Owens 1936," first exhibited in Los Angeles in 1986. In this sculpture, the famous black Olympic athlete is shown pedaling a wheel mounted on the end of a long stick with a handle, slave to a contraption resembling a child's toy and covered with scraps of an old tape measure. Saar evoked the exploitation of black athletes in a sharp, unsentimental way.

A measure of Saar's depth as an artist is that she has often succeeded in bringing together the spiritual and historical sides of her art. "Terra Rosa" is a life-sized sculpture of pregnant woman, seated, with dirt spilling out of her open mouth. The work may refer to the practice of dirt-eating once prevalent among rural southern blacks, but also suggested a ritual celebration of fertility. Several of the human figures in the artist's recent works open to reveal an inner cavity holding some "secret desire, power, or spiritual wound," in the words of Patricia Mathews quoted in the North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century. A 1996 sculptural realization of a lynched woman evoked by Billie Holiday's song "Strange Fruit" contained an old keyhole embedded in the figure's stomach.

Saar in the 1990s often included participatory elements in her works. "Slow Boat," a 1992 sculpture installation mounted at the Whitney Museum's gallery at the Philip Morris corporate offices, featured a pair of wings that viewers could put on and a boat into which a life-size human-shaped indentation had been carved; viewers could lie in the boat and look up at a door mounted on the ceiling. The work addressed the idea of the journey of the soul after death without referring to any specific religion.

Although they may be serious and mysterious, Alison Saar's sculptures are lively and often animated by wit. Puns abound among the titles of her works, and their busy surfaces, festooned with glass, plastic flowers, and all kinds of other small objects, bespeak resilience and a love of the everyday. Saar's reputation has risen ever since her move to New York City in 1983. She has received numerous financial grants, and her works reside in the permanent collections of several important museums, including New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art.

Awards

Work Skin Deep included in the prestigious Biennial Exhibition, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City, 1993. Had work acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art and other important American museums. Received grants from the National Endowment for the Arts, 1985 and 1988, and from the Guggenheim Foundation, 1989.

Works

Selected Works

  • "Jesse Owens 1936", exhibited in 1986. "Snake Charmer", 1986. "Slow Boat", 1992. "Skin Deep", exhibited in 1993. "Terra Rosa", 1993.

Further Reading

Books

  • North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century, edited by Jules Heller and Nancy G. Heller, Garland Press, 1995.
  • Secrets, Dialogues, Revelations: The Art of Betye and Alison Saar, exhibition catalogue edited by Elizabeth Shepherd, Wight Art Gallery, University of California at Los Angeles, 1990.
Periodicals
  • Art in America, December 1992, p. 119.
  • Art News, January 1986, p. 109; April 1990, p. 176.
  • Essence, September 1993, p. 54.
  • New York Times, October 27, 1995, p. C25.

— James M. Manheim

Top
Alison Saar

'Snake Man', color woodcut and lithograph by Alison Saar, 1994, The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu
Birth name Allison M. Saar
Born February 5, 1956 (1956-02-05) (age 55)
Los Angeles, California
Nationality American
Field Sculpture, Installation art
Training Scripps College, Otis Art Institute

Alison Saar (born February 5, 1956)[1] is an American artist who was born in Los Angeles, California and grew up in Laurel Canyon, California. Her parents were Betye Saar, a well-known African American artist, and Richard Saar, an art conservationist. Both parents encouraged their three daughters, all artists, to look at a wide range of art. They were given books on art and were taken to area museums. They also saw Outsider Art, such as Simon Rodia's Watts Towers in Los Angeles and Grandma Prisbrey's Bottle Village in Simi Valley. During high school, Alison began assisting her father in his restoration work. Dealing with artifacts from different cultures―Chinese frescoes, Egyptian mummies, and Pre-Columbian and African art―taught Alison about properties of various materials, techniques, and aesthetics. She received a BA from Scripps College (Claremont, CA) in 1978, having studied African and Caribbean art with Dr. Samella Lewis. Saar’s thesis was on Southern African-American folk art. She received an MFA from Otis Art Institute, now known as Otis College of Art and Design (Los Angeles, CA) in 1981.

Her work has been exhibited internationally with key exhibitions at the UCLA Fowler Museum of Cultural History, L.A. Louver Gallery, Phyllis Kind Gallery in New York City, and Pasadena Museum of California Art. She was an artist in residence at Dartmouth College.

Her sculptures and installations explore themes of African cultural diaspora and spirituality, and her studies of Latin American, Caribbean and African art and religion have informed her work. Saar’s fascination with vernacular folk art and ability to build an oasis of beauty from cast-off objects are evident in her sculptures and paintings. Saar’s highly personal, often life-sized sculptures are marked by their emotional candor, and by contrasting materials and messages that imbue her work with a high degree of cultural subtext.

Art critic Rebecca Epstein writes, “Marrying soft with severe is the installation ‘Suckle’: 15 hanging cast bronze skillets if varying size, with an ample female breast emerging out of each pan bottom. Engaging the material via cooking, nurturing, and sex, the piece is literal but also ironic and iconic, its inherent grace stopping it miles short of cliché.”

“Saar juggles themes of personal and cultural identity as she fashions various sizes of female bodies (often her own) that are buoyant with story while solid in stance. [Her works often embody a] balance of strength and tenderness, in form and idea.”

Awards

Saar is a recipient of a fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, an Artist Fellowship from the National Endowment for the Arts, and a City of Los Angeles (C.O.L.A.) Artist Fellowship.

External links

References

  1. ^ Family Tree Legends

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