Block Museum Mounts IF YOU REMEMBER, I’LL REMEMBER Exhibit Review -– Marathon of Mourning and Hope

Do you remember?

This question reverberates through the Block Museum’s latest show titled If You Remember, I’ll Remember. Curated by Janet Dees, this exhibition at the Mary & Leigh Block Museum of Art in Evanston invites viewers into a room of precious objects, each handcrafted with care. The exhibition draws us into narratives of sorrow, mourning, healing, and hope. Though the show only features works by five individual artists and one artist pair, it’s a marathon. Poeticism abounds and each piece lingers with the viewer long after leaving.

Block Museum Mounts Exhibit Review
Dario Robleto, No One Has a Monopoly Over Sorrow, 2004-2005, 11” x 10 x 8”, Men’s wedding ring finger bones coated in melted bullet lead from various American wars, men’s wedding bands excavated from American battlefields, melted shrapnel, wax dipped preserved bridal bouquets of roses and white calla lilies from various eras, dried chrysanthemums, male hair flowers braided by a civil war widow, fragments from a mourning dress, cold cast brass, bronze, zinc, and silver, rust, mahogany, glass. Photo Credit: Ansen Seale

NO ONE HAS A MONOPOLY OVER SORROW

The show begins not with a bang, but with a whimper.

A dried bed of flowers cradle melted bullet coated fingers from men that fought in American wars. This moment of graceful mourning sets the tone for the show.

Block Museum Mounts Exhibit Review
Kristine Aono, The Nail That Sticks Up the Farthest … (detail), 2017, Installation at Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University Photo Credit: Caroline Claflin
Block Museum Mounts Exhibit Review
Kristine Aono, The Nail That Sticks Up the Farthest… (detail), 2017, Installation at Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University. Photo Credit: Caroline Claflin
Block Museum Mounts Exhibit Review
Kristine Aono, The Nail That Sticks Up the Farthest... (detail), 2017, Installation at Block Museum of Art, Northwestern University. Photo Credit: Caroline Claflin

THE NAIL THAT STICKS UP THE FARTHEST

Kristine Aono’s installation is a haunting highpoint of the show and a museum rarity—you can touch it. The artwork asks us to place a nail in one of the thousands of holes on the board, representing every Japanese-American interned. Drawing towards the work to place a nail, you are engulfed by memories—letters from her Japanese American grandfather who had been interned during World War II and the testimonies from other internees cover the board. On either side of the American flag made with nails, reads the ominous phrase “The Nail That Sticks Up the Farthest, Takes the Most Pounding.”

Block Museum Mounts Exhibit Review
Shan Goshorn, Prayers For Our Children, 201, approx 11.25” X 11.25” X 20.5” Arches watercolor paper splints printed with archival inks, acrylic paint. Photo Credit: Shan Goshornpepper

PRAYERS FOR OUR CHILDREN

Midway in the exhibition, baskets carefully woven by the Eastern Cherokee artist Shan Goshorn pepper the open floor plan. One basket shimmers in shades of blue and turquoise. In this sea of blue, white star-like shapes pattern the basket and a large sepia square is featured on one side. Taking a step closer, the blues, turquoises, whites, and sepia colors come into focus. Upon closer inspection, this bright blue basket is made up of various historical documents: the sepia rectangle is an image of Native American children attending a boarding school that aimed to forcibly assimilate them and words on the woven strips of blue bear prayers of healing for these children.

Block Museum Mounts Exhibit Review
Samantha Hill, Herbarium: A historic reflection inspired by the Mason Family collection, 2015, 45ft x 8 feet, Installation detail, Hyde Park Art Center, Chicago Photo Credit: Samantha Hill

HERBARIUM

An herbarium preserves, collects, and catalogues. In Herbarium: A historic reflection inspired by the Mason family collection (2015), Samantha Hill crafts her own historical herbarium, connecting the violence against African Americans in the past to the present. Every element of the work is made and measured with care—the golden frames, the typed cards, the carefully measured pieces of twine.

Block Museum Mounts Exhibit Review
Samantha Hill, Herbarium: A historic reflection inspired by the Mason Family collection, 2015, 45ft x 8 feet, Installation detail, Hyde Park Art Center, Chicago, Photo Credit: Samantha Hill

In this image, we see Hill connecting the bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church by the Ku Klux Klan in 1963, which killed four young African American girls, with recent incidents of police brutality against young African Americans.

Block Museum Mounts Exhibit Review
Marie Watt, Witness, 2015, 71 × 180.5 in. Reclaimed wool blanket, embroidery floss, thread Photo Credit: Aaron Johanson
Block Museum Mounts Exhibit Review
Marie Watt, Witness (detail), 2015, 71 × 180.5 in. Reclaimed wool blanket, embroidery floss, thread. Photo Credit: Aaron Johanson

WITNESS

The finale, a large wool blanket swinging gently from the ceiling, offers a hopeful crescendo. Atop this rhythmically striped blanket, Marie Watt has embroidered an image of a Quamichan tradition called a potlatch, which were banned in Canada and the United States from the late nineteenth until the mid-twentieth century. Looking out from this traditional act of coming together, the artist’s daughter stares out at the viewer—What is she asking of us?

All the works in the exhibition ask the viewer to consider our troubled collective past, yet these crushing histories are interrupted by moments of beauty and hope.

Don’t miss this timely and poignant show.

RECOMMENDED

Top Pick For: Museum Dwellers
Not recommended for: Those looking for easy entertainment

When:

On exhibit through June 18, 2017.
Monday: CLOSED
Tuesday: 10AM - 5PM
Wednesday: 10AM - 5PM
Thursday: 10AM - 8PM
Friday: 10AM - 8PM
Saturday: 10AM - 5PM
Sunday: 10AM - 5PM

Where:

Mary and Leigh Block Museum of Art, 40 Arts Circle Drive, Evanston, IL

Tickets:

Free.

Online at www.blockmuseum.northwestern.edu
By phone at 847-491-4000

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