Saturday, January 8, 2011

Fleming Museum at UVM






2010
20.5 X 20.5
cotton floss on cotton toile

2 pieces made for UNDER the BIG TOP running 1/25 - 5/22 at the Fleming Museum in Burlington, VT.


Here's the label:

(left) “The Piebald – Hypertrichonic Man”, (right) “Has anyone seen my lighter?”, 2010
Cotton embroidery floss on cotton/linen toile

Richard Saja
(American, Contemporary)

Contemporary artist Richard Saja views the circus as a controlled microcosm of all that is wild and uncivilized: “…the sanctioned gawking of placing those different than us in pens and cages to be ogled and derided, to be entertained by oafs and fools behaving in ways society doesn't permit.” In this diptych he combines these sentiments: in the panel at left, he presents a piebald, or spotted man, with hypertrichosis, a condition of excessive hair growth informally called “werewolf syndrome.” Many individuals with these medical conditions often joined the circus as part of the sideshow attractions as they were otherwise ostracized by society. Saja combines this figure with a group of clowns at sea, one of whom has tossed a fellow clown’s lighter overboard.

Saja embroiders his motley crew of circus figures on toile, a linen fabric that bears a repeated pattern of bucolic scenes of country life, which was primarily used in decorating designs for bourgeois society in the 18th century. This merging of high and low society heightens the disjuncture between the two worlds.

Courtesy of the artist

4 comments:

Maryann Devine said...

Lovely!

agnes szucs said...

i like your works!
they are quite distinctive!
and i like toile.

:)
agnes

Skinny Like Us said...

I am obsessed with your embroideries on toile! Love love love!!

Anonymous said...

very nice work-I was surprised to see you have work up in my town right now- Burlington. I'm going to plan to see it!