“The Ukrainian Diaspora: Women Artists, 1908-2015” Exhibition

The Ukrainian Museum

poster for “The Ukrainian Diaspora: Women Artists, 1908-2015” Exhibition

This event has ended.

In celebration of the 90th Anniversary of the founding of the Ukrainian National Women’s League of America

The Ukrainian Diaspora: Women Artists, 1908-2015 is the first major exhibition to examine the relationship between Ukrainian identity and women artists beyond the borders of geographic Ukraine. It features over 100 works by 44 artists, primarily from North America, where the largest artist population resides, but also from Europe. A majority of the artists belong to the third wave of immigration, after World War II, when the loss of childhood home and country had to be negotiated in a new host land, and where cultural identity, community, and gender roles were redefined and transformed. These artists were either born in Ukraine before the war or born abroad into the 1960s. Also included are artists predating the third immigration wave whose work had matured or was already emerging by the time of World War II, as well as several artists of the post-Soviet-era fourth immigration wave.

Among the artists represented, adherence to their Ukrainian cultural identity is paradoxically simple and complex. While they would arguably agree that they are tied to it, the depth of that connection and its relevance to their personal lives, work, and relationships manifests itself in profoundly different ways, and is influenced as much by life circumstances as it is by the audience for whom they are creating their art. It may also change over time. The Ukrainian Diaspora: Women Artists, 1908-2015 thus endeavors to present a broad range of works, illustrating multiple pathways with which artists have chosen to articulate, transform, hybridize, or seemingly disengage from this sensibility.

Some works directly assert a connection to Ukrainian themes, representational forms, and historical events. These include Yaroslava Surmach Mills’ reverse glass paintings of Ukrainian folk life and ritual traditions, and Christina Kudryk’s painting The Promised Land (2011), from her Heritage series, addressing one’s past immigration experience, as well as her Maidan (2014), expressing shock and anguish at the protests and massacre in Kyiv’s Maidan Square during the winter of 2013-2014, just as Yulia Pinkusevich re-created its chaos in Silencing the Cacophony (2015). Sonia Delaunay’s memories of the beautiful colors of nature in her childhood home in Ukraine are a personal reference contributing to the development of her color theories and fashion design practice, as seen in the two untitled etching and color aquatints.

Many more works resist such clear relationships, occupying a realm of visual engagement rich with multiple cultural associations, including (but not exclusively) Ukrainian. Those familiar with Ukrainian embroidery and its history would likely recognize a link between the hunter green, black, orange, and red color palette commonly used in regions of Western Ukraine and a similar color range in Lialia Kuchma’s small tapestry, Extract (2010), although clear references between the Ukrainian association and its final manifestation are not explicitly put forth within the artwork itself. Nor would viewers be aware that Extract previously existed in the shape of an oblong ritual cloth – similar to a Ukrainian rushnyk – and was later changed to meet new aesthetic interests. Midsummer by contemporary artist Inka Essenhigh is escapist and fantasy-like, composed of a narrow range of color, and emphasizes the environment rather than the central figure. Essenhigh’s surrealistic style is a decisive departure from clearly defined narratives, an exploration into an internal world where ambiguity prevails.

The purpose of the exhibition is to expand notions of “Ukrainianness” in art beyond its typical associations with traditional folk art as a woman’s practice. The majority of the artists in the exhibition are over the age of 50 and experienced a number of the issues that many women artists faced during the women’s liberation movement. These issues included mediating a masculinized art mainstream that diminished or excluded ethnics just as it did women, and making a conscious decision to pursue the contemporary aesthetic agendas traditionally associated with male art practice, such as welded sculpture and formalist painting. In addition, many artists had to reconcile personally the diaspora’s emphasis on traditional art as the most effective way of preserving Ukrainian identity.

Multiple types of artwork are included in the exhibition, illustrating the range of media and subjects, styles, and aesthetic ideas with which these artists have worked. These include icon painting; the traditional academic genres of still life, portraiture, and landscape; figurative sculpture; abstract painting; tapestry; and mixed-media works. In an effort to communicate aesthetic flexibility and the individualized nature of identity, artworks illustrating an engagement with dual identities – Ukrainian and western modernist – are also represented. Their diversity is intended to widen the narrative of what it means to be a woman artist of the Ukrainian diaspora, and not simply a woman artist who happens to be a Ukrainian diasporan.

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Schedule

from October 18, 2015 to February 14, 2016

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