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Sex, Sexism and Society
Through March 12, 2000
Harvard Crimson Review
On the Boylston St. sidewalk, a rather plain ad invites passers
by into the Gallery of Social/Political Art located within the Community
Church of Boston. Straight up the stairs, the space that currently
houses "Sex, Sexism, and Society" seems appropriately
designed for witness, not worship. Several tiers of bolt-bound,
theater-style chairs are anchored in the center of the room, while
the walls are a shock of mixed-media, the works of multiple artists
all squeezing for space. Some stand out, some strike out, but all
speak out about sexism, sexual discrimination, sexuality, women
heroes and related themes. Many artists address gender relations.
Riva Leviten's arrangement of simple coloring-book cut-outs with
scribbles on white, "Carrying on in the Great Tradition = Men
are Men and Women are Dolls or Madonnas," critiques with simplicity,
detachment and humor. Another recurring subject is the body. Roblee
Hoffman's "Virtual Group" suggests the capacity of technology
to transform but not erase the material body and biological identity.
Tom Hauck, in "Sacred and Profane Love," targets conflicting
images of sexuality as represented by mainstream society, moral
codes and our impulsive biology. The struggle is phrased as the
question of whether or not to reproduce-a baby wriggles between
"sacred" Christ and "profane" naked couple,
surrounded by scrawled mathematical equations, sketches of mechanical
apparatus, sperm, houses, a clock and other miscellany. Other successful
pieces similarly re-mangle distorted representations of sex as a
way of recovering dignity or power. However, some artists seem unable
to transcend the clichés, and their work is just as obvious as the
stereotype. Many artists reiterate the woman equals doll equation
without Leviten's adroitness. But Joe Fekieta, Bloody Chiclitz and
Dale Kaplan use sharper instruments: humor, enigma, insight. Fekieta's
grotesque pen-and-inks, each accompanied by a six-line poem, lampoon
sex and relationships as often tangled and ridiculous-think lots
of vines and anthropomorphic gourds. Overall, "Sex, Sexism,
and Society" puts up a good fight, whether hitting you over
the head or searing you with images of injustice, then stitching
you up with laughter.
"Sex, Sexism, and Society" is on display through March
12 at the Gallery of Social/Political Art at 565 Boylston St. near
Copley (Green Line) and Back Bay (Orange Line) stations. Hours are
Friday and Saturday, 2 to 6 p.m. and Sunday, 1:30 to 5 p.m.
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