Amanda Barr

Visions In Clay Invitational

Website:

https://www.amandambarr.com/

Artist Statement:

I use my own history of trauma, abuse, and disability to create objects that are at once culturally recognizable and highly personal; it is my hope that each viewer will recognize the overarching themes and identify them within their own experiences, thus encountering a moment of reflection, empathy, or even catharsis. My work is meant to be uncomfortable, to evoke a sense of anxiety or disquiet. Trauma is a disruption, so my work is created to be eerily beautiful, delicate and fine porcelain and glass formed into shapes with unsettling evocations. Society may prefer we not address this, but only by confronting and addressing them can we move forward.  

"Lost in Translation" addresses the issues that trauma can create in communication; whether that be a physical trauma that damages ability to speak, think, or understand language, or mental and emotional trauma that significantly effects abilities to process, connect, and manage interpersonal relationships. My work is my voice, and a way to help others connect, to feel heard, and to even help them begin to communicate. 

On and off over the past 15 years I have worked off and on as an educator, writer, and translator in English / Spanish. Part of that job is not to simply convert each word one-to-one, but to interpret ideas, meaning, concepts and a hundred different aspects of communication outside of simple word definitions. Language is not simply words and grammar but idioms, tone, cultural concepts and dialect. False cognates (embarazada does not mean embarrassed), dialectic shifts (in Spain one can coger el autobús, but in México this has wildly different connotations), or vocabulary gaps can implode a conversation. Communication is a never-ending mine field of missteps and missed connections. 

In “Lost in Translation” neon lights– culturally tied to the OPEN and NO / VACANCY signs at bars and roadside motels– display text in multiple languages, surrounded by abstracted porcelain objects. t's doubtful any audience member speaks every language. The objects– thistles, pointe shoes, prairie sunflowers, lilies, skulls, and face masks, have been dipped in liquid clay and fired out, leaving only ashes inside their ceramic shells behind as evidence. In this work, I want the audience to feel the frustration that myself and others feel as we try to relate through the tangles and thorns of disability and PTSD– something that has been made infinitely harder during the COVID-19 pandemic. 

Biography:

Amanda Barr most recently finished her MFA in Studio Arts and MA in Art History at the University of Montana. She currently has a studio practice in Missoula as well as freelancing as a writer and designer, and is the Director of the University Center Gallery at the University of Montana. 

 

tlamanalistli / sacrifice (2021) 
porcelain, neon, plexi: thread red neon text, loose porcelain 'curtain' of pills, flowers, and masks, flowing into pyramid of porcelain dipped skulls and thistles 
60”h x 46”w x 18”d 
$5500 
Tlamanalisti is the Nahuatl (Uto-Aztecan) word for the ritual of sacrifice. This piece refers to the frequent messaging that vulnerable groups should ‘be sacrificed’ during the pandemic in exchanged for a return to normalcy. 

 

beschämt / ashamed (2021) 
porcelain, stain, resin, plexi, neon: yellow neon text in German, surrounded by porcelain pieces in the shape of a lemon. Pieces are slip-dipped and cast paperclay porcelain in black and white- black thistles, white lemons, white cast 3-D printed peeled lemons (baroque inspired), and white prairie sunflowers, set in resin on plexi background 
29”h x 43”w x 10”d  
$4600 
A personal piece based on a comment from the artist’s mother (I’m ashamed to have raised you as a daughter), this work addresses the cyclical relationship between shame and trauma. 

 

misericordia / mercy (2021) 
neon, porcelain, plexi, resin: blue neon text in Italian above a garland-style sculpture of porcelain pieces on plexi. Porcelain is soda-fired slip-dipped thistles, lilacs, stargazer lilies, and ballet pointe shoes, all in various shades from white to blue to grey, adhered with resin to plexi. 
50”h x 56”w x 12”d 
$5600 
Miseria et Misericordia (misery and mercy), pain and beauty, are two concepts that exist in constant companionship for women. The title is a reference to a speech by Pope Francis. 

 

merde / shit (2019) 
porcelain, neon, bone, resin, plexi: green neon text in French, surrounded by porcelain pieces, light soda fired slip-dipped small carnivore skulls and thistles (roadkill and weeds) 
30”h x 31”w x 10”d 
$1900
Shit happens.