Susana Guerrero: Mother Consumed
Chelsea, New York: In Mother, Consumed, her second solo exhibition at 532 Gallery Thomas Jaeckel, Susana Guerrero presents a collection of recently created objects that explore the symbiosis between mother and child during gestation, that precarious period when two lives are inextricably intertwined and a woman shares of her own organs, sustenance, and spirit so that a new, fully autonomous being might spring into the world. Guerrero’s works merge the traditionally feminine process of weaving with materials more commonly found in the historically male realm of industrial fabrication. A veil woven from thin cables that flows from a bloody red to a watery blue, a delicate womblike cage fashioned from thin strips of metal covered with sharp thorns from the medicinal Agave plant, and a hard ceramic sphere covered with gilded baby-bottle nipples all hint at a profound tension between warm maternal instinct and cold self-protection. Based loosely upon a Mediterranean myth of a woman who surrenders her own flesh to engender several other lives but is then parthenogenetically reborn, these works bear witness to that mysterious passage from unity to duality through which we all go at the inception of our lives.
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La Madre Devorada / The Devoured Mother, 2020, Glazed ceramic, braided electrical wire, 28” x 11” x 8"
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El Mal En Ti Iii / The Evil In You Iii, 2018, Woven electrical wire, enameled ceramic, leather, 84” x 36” x 8"
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El Mal En Mi I / The Evil In Me I, 2018, Woven electrical wire, enameled ceramic, brass, 37” x 15” x 8"
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El Mal En Ti Ii / The Evil In You Ii, 2018, Woven electrical wire, enameled ceramic, leather, 89” x 40” x 8"
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Lampara / Lamp, 2018, Glazed ceramic with gold, 5" x 9" x 5"
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Autopsia Del Mito / Autopsy Of The Myth, 2016, Brass terminals, woven cable, glazed ceramic, 89" x 79" x 12"
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La Madre Y El Tiempo / Mother And Time, 2016, Cotton cameo, embroidered nails
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Entranas / Bowels, 2019, Glazed ceramic, braided electrical wire, (variable dimensions)
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Milk Bomb / La Bomba De Leche, 2009, Glazed ceramic with gold, 9 1/2" x 9 1/2" x 9 1/2"
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Entranas Negras / Black Entrails, 2019, Glazed ceramic, Palm Tree thorns, (variable dimensions)
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La Mare Dels Peixos, 2017, Woodcut on skin, enameled ceramics, 79" x 79" x 4"
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La Desollada / The Skinned, 2018, Brass, glazed ceramic, terminals, woven cable, 89" x 79" x 84"
In Mother, Consumed, her second solo exhibition at 532 Gallery Thomas Jaeckel, Susana Guerrero presents a collection of objects that explore the symbiosis between mother and child during gestation, that precarious period when two lives are inextricably intertwined and a woman shares of her own organs, sustenance, and spirit so that a new, fully autonomous being might spring into the world. Partially inspired by the Spanish-Mediterranean myth “La Mare dels Peixos,” in which a woman surrenders her own flesh to engender several other lives but is then parthenogenetically reborn, these works bear witness to that mysterious passage from unity to duality through which we all go at the inception of our lives, and which neither mother nor child ever fully leaves behind.
Guerrero’s works merge the traditionally feminine process of weaving with materials more commonly found in the historically male realm of mechanized mass fabrication. In Arrancarse los Dientes (Tear off Teeth, 2018), a handful of ceramic human teeth rest inside a delicate womblike cage fashioned from thin strips of metal and the sharp thorns of the medicinal Agave plant. Gnashing, tearing, healing, and feeding are forced into an uneasy symbolic accord. A similar thorny cage is seen in La Madre (The Mother, 2020) as the bottom of a corset woven from red insulated electrical wire that flows down the wall and onto the floor and then transforms into a wavelike blue flood, hinting at the deep interconnection between the natural cycles of menstruation and the ocean’s tides. In contrast, some works in the show use a more blatantly industrial sheen to parody the softness of flesh, as in Bomba de Leche (Milk Bomb, 2009), a hard ceramic sphere covered with gilded baby-bottle nipples, setting up an unsettling tension between warm maternal instinct and cold self-protection, and perhaps the idea that there’s strength to be gained through such self-surrender.
The exhibition’s grandest statements are found in two visually and thematically related works. The first, a series of pieces from 2018 and 2019 titled El Mal en Tí (The Evil in You) and El Mal en Mí (The Evil in Me), is presented as a wall-wide display of five forms in black electrical wire with enameled ceramic, brass, and leather elements woven in. In addition to another corset with shiny red toothlike pendants dangling from tentacle-like straps, there are more amorphous scarf-like and sock-like shapes that are by turns uterine, serpentine, and intestinal. The second piece, La Desollada (The Flayed Woman, 2018), features a red wire form with thin, leaflike brass blades that suggests a strange otherworldly flower, from which flows undulating red tubes that resolve themselves into the shapes of lungs, kidneys, heart, stomach, and liver. In addition to the previously mentioned theme of two lives unified during gestation, the titles and forms of these works reflect a deep ambivalence about motherhood, gender, and biological destiny that runs throughout the show. Guerrero’s works don’t want to give us easy answers about the complex, lifelong web of tensions that exist between mother and child; instead, they pose whispering but insistent questions that are meant to get under our skin and linger for days or years to come.
Susana Guerrero is a Fine Arts PHD, Miguel Hernandez University, Elche, Spain (2012). She received an Advanced Studies Award (D.E.A.), Miguel Hernandez University, Elche (2007), and graduated Sculpture and Print, Polytechnic University in Valencia, Spain (1996-1997). She is a professor at Miguel Hernandez University, Fine Arts Campus, Altea, Spain, since 2003. She is also the recipient of numerous fellowships and residencies in Italy, Germany, Mexico, and Greece, and has work in a dozen institutional collections throughout Europe and Mexico.
For further information or to schedule an interview with the artist, please e-mail us at info@532gallery.com