Erie Art Museum, May 24 - EXTENDED THROUGH NOVEMBER 19, 2023
Erie Art Museum Quarterly, Spring 20233, Issue 1:4
Erie Art Museum, May 24 - EXTENDED THROUGH NOVEMBER 19, 2023
Erie Art Museum Quarterly, Spring 20233, Issue 1:4
elin o'Hara slavick, Madeleine Slavick, Sarah Slavick, and Susanne Slavick
USA TOUR:
Sordoni Art Gallery, Wilkes University, Wilkes-Barre PA, April 22 – June 1, 2025
Martin Art Gallery, Muhlenberg College, Allentown PA, January – March, 2025
Erie Art Museum, Erie PA, May 18 - November 19 , 2023
Dowd Gallery, SUNY Cortland, October 24 - December 2, 2022
Erie Art Museum gallery tour here
Erie Art Museum installation documentation here
Dowd Gallery virtual tour here
Dowd Gallery documentation here
10min videos by the four artists here
An extensive Maine Art Journal article about the project here.
Dowd Gallery press release here:
Info here
Programmed events at SUNY Cortland here. (Scroll down chronologically.)
_________
The College Art Association CAA Committee on Women in the Arts chose Family Tree Whakapapa as an April 2021 pick with this summary:
This exhibition brings together the artwork of four sisters living in different parts of the globe and focuses on the related but distinct ways they engage with the arboreal imagination. Tangled into their photographs, paintings, life histories, and political commitments, the trees in their artwork are intricate lines, bold shapes, diffuse traces, and stylized patterns. Defying the ease with which the genealogical and botanical connect in the figure of the family tree, the Slavick sisters make it a thing of wonder: rooted in the ground and multiplying in our imaginations, family trees are botany and biology written with longing, hope, history, and loss.
FAMILY TREE features the work of four sisters: elin o’Hara Slavick (Irvine CA), Madeleine Slavick (Wairarapa, New Zealand), Sarah Slavick (Boston MA) and Susanne Slavick (Pittsburgh PA). As curators, painters, photographers and writers, all have incorporated images of trees in social, political and environmental conditions — trees that stand as refuge and livelihood, consumed and consuming, under assault and triumphant, as historical record and as harbinger of things to come. The exhibition offers perspectives both unsettling and soothing as nature increasingly reflects salient issues of our times.
In its beauty and bounty, nature is often regarded as benign and apolitical. We do not expect a tree to assume an editorial stance or embody ideology. The conceptual, analytical and sensual intersect in Family Tree with works that probe the multitude of relations within and between trees and humans. Branching out to, and from, the world, the artists address a variety of concerns.
Based on her experiences in Japan, elin o’Hara slavick presents photographic works that bear witness to the ongoing aftermath of atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the nuclear power disaster in Fukushima. Madeleine Slavick’s photographs reveal dichotomies and their collapses in our experience of nature in environments both rural and urban—they decry the marginalization of trees. Sarah Slavick’s paintings explore the underground life of trees in an elegiac series that conveys both grief and hope, for what is threatened and for what might survive through possible strategies that trees offer—for all species on the planet. Susanne Slavick hand paints trees derived from ‘tree of life’ carpet designs over printed scenes of environmental destruction and depredation. These trees do not lie down like doormats; they rise up and persist, suggesting the possibility of recovery.
FAMILY TREE WHAKAPAPA premiered at Aratoi Wairarapa Museum of Art and History, Masterton, New Zealand, December 12, 2020 – February 14, 2021 and traveled to Wallace Arts Centre, Auckland, NZ, April 21 - June 13, 2021.
Note: "Whakapapa" is a Maori concept that refers to placing oneself in a wider context, and linking oneself to land and community.
Watercolor/ink on Arches paper, 22.5” x 30” each
Archival inkjet prints, Diptych, 47 x 22 inches each
Silver gelatin prints manipulated in the darkroom, mounted, unframed, 11” x 14” each
A selection from 528 chemical drawings (developer and fixer) on outdated/fogged silver gelatin paper left in a Caltech darkroom
Gouache on archival inkjet print on Hahnemühle paper
13 framed works , 13.25 x 19.25 inches each
Oil, acrylic and Galkyd on three panels, 80 x 109 inches each
Archival inkjet prints, Triptych, 21.25 x 17.25 inches each, framed
Trees that survived the A-bomb in Hiroshima, solarized silver gelatin prints, framed, 8.5” x 11”
Archival inkjet print from a scan of a solarized silver gelatin print, framed, 32.5” x 41”
Oil/canvas, 72 x 48 inches
Archival inkjet print, 13.25 x 19.25 inches framed
Oil/canvas, 56”x 44”
Archival inkjet prints, 17.25 x 21.25 inches each framed
Gouache on archival inkjet print on Hahnemühle paper. Sources: Simon de Trey White, World Wildlife Fund UK, Nepal firewood. Tree of Life design from English embroidered canvas, first half 17th century, Metropolitan Museum of Art, NY. 62.5 x 33 inches
Archival inkjet prints, Diptych, 47 x 22 inches each
Solarized silver gelatin print, 16 x 20 inches
One of 528 chemical drawings (developer and fixer) on outdated/fogged silver gelatin paper left in a Caltech darkroom, 8” x 10”
Triptych of archival inkjet prints, 19.5 x 15.5 inches each
Oil, acrylic and Galkyd on three panels, 80 x 109 inches
Oil, acrylic and Galkyd on three panels, 80 x 109 inches
Oil/canvas, 72 x 48 inches
Archival inkjet print, 19.25 x 13.25 inches framed
Gouache on archival digital print on Hahnemühle paper, 72 x 36 inches
Oil/canvas, 56 ¾ x 44 inches
A selection from 528 chemical drawings (developer and fixer) on outdated/fogged silver gelatin paper left in a Caltech darkroom, 8” x 10” (various dimensions)
Watercolor/flasche/ink on arches paper, 22.5 x 30 inches
Watercolor on Arches paper, 22.5 x 30 inches each
Organic matter collected in 2008
Opening 11 December 5pm EST / 12th December 11am NZDT
MEDIA RELEASE
Four sisters exhibit together in Masterton and Auckland, New Zealand
Aratoi Museum of Art and History, with support from Masterton Creative Communities, presents Family Tree Whakapapa, featuring the work of four sisters: elin o’Hara Slavick (Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA), Madeleine Marie Slavick (Wairarapa, New Zealand), Sarah Slavick (Boston, Massachusetts, USA) and Susanne Slavick (Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA).
As curators, painters, photographers and writers, all have incorporated images of trees in social, political and environmental conditions — trees that stand as refuge and livelihood, consumed and consuming, under assault and triumphant, as historical record and as harbinger of things to come. The exhibition offers perspectives both unsettling and soothing as nature increasingly reflects salient issues of our times.
“Aratoi is honoured to exhibit this body of work, by a family of accomplished artists whose work spans the globe,” says Aratoi Director Susanna Shadbolt. “We are also pleased to publish a full-colour publication, with artwork by the four sisters, an essay by historian and theorist of contemporary art Katherine Guinness (USA), and a poem by Wairarapa kaimahi Rawiri Smith. The cover, pictured above, features an oil painting by Sarah Slavick.”
Family Tree Whakapapa opens on Saturday 12th December with an artist talk at 11am – with Madeleine present and her sisters joining online from the United States. The exhibition runs at Aratoi until 14 February 2021. It will then travel to Wallace Arts Centre in Auckland from 20 April - 13 June, 2021.
In its beauty and bounty, nature is often regarded as benign and apolitical. We do not expect a tree to assume an editorial stance or embody ideology. The conceptual, analytical and sensual intersect in Family Tree Whakapapa with works that probe the multitude of relations within and between trees and humans. Branching out to, and from, the world, the artists address a variety of concerns.
Based on her experiences in Japan, elin o’Hara slavick presents photographic works that bear witness to the ongoing aftermath of atomic bombs in Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the nuclear power disaster in Fukushima.
Madeleine Slavick’s photographs reveal dichotomies and their collapses in our experience of nature in environments both rural and urban—they decry the marginalization of trees.
Sarah Slavick’s paintings explore the underground life of trees in an elegiac series that conveys both grief and hope, for what is threatened and for what might survive through possible strategies that trees offer—for all species on the planet.
Susanne Slavick hand paints trees derived from ‘tree of life’ carpet designs over printed scenes of environmental destruction and depredation. These trees do not lie down like doormats; they rise up and persist, suggesting the possibility of recovery.
The artists have also made recordings of poems related to the exhibition’s themes; visitors may listen around a live tree in the gallery, while Madeleine Slavick’s poem ‘one leaf, one moment | Kotahi ake te rau, kotahi ake te wā’ acts as entrance and exit. (The translation is by Rawiri Smith.)
The artists acknowledge support from Masterton Creative Communities, as well as the City of Boston, College of Fine Arts at Carnegie Mellon University, Hiroshima City University, Hiroshima Peace Memorial Museum, The Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, and Lesley University.
GALLERY STATEMENT:
FAMILY TREE WHAKAPAPA
In a 1940 poem, Bertolt Brecht asked:
What kind of times are they, when
To talk about trees is almost a crime
Because it implies silence about so many horrors?
In a 1995 poem, Adrienne Rich answered:
.....so why do I tell you
anything? Because you still listen, because in times like these
to have you listen at all, it's necessary
to talk about trees.
Family Tree Whakapapa brings together the work of four sisters to ‘talk about trees.’
As curators, painters, photographers and writers, we portray trees in conditions in and outside of human care and conflict. Genealogical roots and botanical roots intertwine.
In its beauty and force, ‘nature’ is often regarded as benign and apolitical. We do not expect trees to assume editorial stances or embody ideologies. Whether bombed or irradiated, contained or marginalised, in underground union or standing in persistence, trees and their representations can offer solace and space—for the necessity of talking, listening and learning.
Family Tree Whakapapa offers both critical commentary and sensual delight in visualizing the tree as refuge and livelihood, consumed and consuming, under assault and triumphant, as historical record, and as harbinger of things to come.
PRESS LINKS:
Sisters add Whakapapa to work, Wairapapa Times-Age, May 5, 2021
Family Tree Whakapapa, CAA News Today, CWA Pick for April 2021, April 27, 2021
Family Tree Whakapapa, Love in the Time of Covid: A Chronicle of the Pandemic, December 2020
Monday Artpost, December 28, 2020
“Family Tree Whakapapa” PhotoForum, December 19, 2020
Becky Bateman, “Family Tree Whakapapa”, Wairarapa Midweek, December 16, 2020, p.14