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Saturday, March 18, 2017

a recommendation


hi there,

throughout my research so far, i wanted to share Jessica MacCormack's book that we have at the farr. at the end of my residency, i'll be putting together a small book of my findings and research, providing a little bibliography of works at the library that are relevant to the topic of depression in contemporary art.
The See its on the residency project shelf, easy to find:





see ya,
maia

Sunday, March 12, 2017

the farr winter residency



hi there, 

i’m really excited to be the winter resident at the fine arts reading room. i kind of don’t believe it, but its real enough that i’ve been working on it a bunch. here is an idea of what i’m planning to work on. it’s the paragraph that got me here in the first place:

Over the past few semesters, all of my projects have followed a similar line of inquiry. It has to do with contemporary art and depression, with being a depressed person that makes art. It raises questions about the communicative nature of artworks, and the assumption that they are these powerful vessels for expression and for aesthetic communication. I’ve been wondering what happens when an artwork doesn’t solicit an interpretation, but instead makes the viewer weary. What kind of value does art have if it presents and produces the disengagement felt when depressed? When the relational property of art is exhausted, what kind of aesthetic remains? If the image can’t be seen or interpreted, what’s its function? This distance, this break of connection so often felt in a depressed state, and its properties in art, all of this has been the questions I go back to.

The prevalent scientific notions present depression as a hindrance to creativity, but I don’t think that they are necessarily incompatible. On the other hand, I see no value at all in furthering the antiquated notion of melancholy and the artistic genius, so I will stay very far away from all of that. Rather, I want to research about art that embodies depression, art where depression’s symptoms are present in its very constitution. Art that is depressed, not art that presents depression as a theme, not art that exemplifies depression.

I know I can’t be alone, that there are other depressed people that make art in the world and that their art can embody depression. I want to find it, and I want to know what value it has in current art world principles. I want to find more sources and critical essays on the subjects of depression in contemporary art, and in the end present a concise booklet of my findings.

Over the course of the residency, I want to utilize the exhibition space to showcase some of those works. Providing the context under which they are chosen and exhibited will be of importance, so I think small write-ups and text excerpts should be present and informative. Throughout the six week timeline, the exhibited works will build on each other along with the research, providing more artworks to be seen (physically if available, in images otherwise), and critical considerations to be reflected upon. This exposure of depressed artworks is important as to raise awareness and understanding of individual and collective experiences of depression. More importantly, I think it necessary to reconcile creativity with traditional psychiatric assessments of the depressive state.

so, yeah. it’s a little bit of a messy topic, and it intersects with so many other areas of study. it feels like a huge undertaking and such an important subject, i don’t want to mess up. if you are aware of any critical research/writings/artworks on the subject, or if you are an artist living with depression currently or in the past, i invite you to reach out to me if you’d like. i know it’s terrifying, i was terrified to propose this subject, as it discloses my mental health to strangers. but i think that’s a really important part of it (if you don’t feel like it, you can talk to me anonymously too). also, if you feel i am glossing over an important aspect of the realm of contemporary art and depression, or mental health in general, do please let me know and i will acknowledge all i have missed in the aim to be as inclusive as possible.
thank you to paige and everyone at the farr for granting me this opportunity.

sincerely,
maia c. donnelly

(maia@maiadonnelly.com)

ps: my first shelf install is up at the farr, i encourage you to swing by to see and have a better idea of what i'm working on