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March 22, 2008

Art for a Time of Crisis

Nancy Van Ness

by Nancy Van Ness
- USA -


In a heap on the studio floor as though they had collapsed under some disaster, fallen birds present a scene of despair. I am drawn toward them. They are a very powerful artistic reinterpretation of the Japanese tradition of the thousand cranes that people traditionally make from beautiful origami paper as signs of hope (most recently that would be hope for peace).

A closer look reveals that the defeated origami cranes are made from newspaper accounts of war, violence, cruelty; indeed these birds have succumbed under the weight of the torment and anguish of needless human suffering all over the world. I found them when I visited another studio at the Kimmel Harding Nelson Center for the Arts in Nebraska City, Nebraska, where I was briefly in residence.


Julia Karll's cranes of despair.
The cranes first appeared in the sketch books of Julia Karll alongside handwritten notes on their pages, Look at this! A young Missouri artist who just finished her MFA in Textile Design at the University of Kansas, she is just launching her career and is currently in an artist’s residency at the Kimmel. Slender and quick, Julia has something of the sprite or pixie about her which belies the gravity of her interests. Long aware that she didn't need words to convey meaning, she instead asks herself how much she can convey in her work through the elements of form, space, size, color, line. Always interested in "what happened and why," Julia created her fallen cranes during her residency. She can’t help making art that reflects her anti-war and anti-violence beliefs. Her premise is that people in the US are unwilling to face the world in which they live, that they exist on unfounded hope, doing nothing. She says she finds it hard to have any hope at all when this world is in crisis and headed for more. Julia believes it is her job to hold up a mirror to anyone who might see what she sees. Look at this!

Another of her works is a long scroll of clear paper on which she copies stories from the newspapers, some of which turn into the cranes of despair. The scroll of wretchedness, destruction, and disaster goes on and on, relentlessly. Julia says that assuming the human race survives this time, she wants to have been the recorder of these horrors. She is making a statement for generations to come. And she wants to record that now a huge majority of Americans are opposed to the occupation of Iraq. Just a few years ago, those who opposed it were accused of being unpatriotic, even traitors. Today, a majority of US citizens are opposed, as well as a substantial majority of other countries which have always been opposed to the US invasion. She is making a record of these things. Look at this!


Artists and concerned citizen, Julia Karll.
Julia employed hooking techniques to make rugs of these stories of horrors. In one show called Accumulation and Dissolution, she invited exhibition visitors to remove pieces of the work — to take the stories with them, literally. She has also created wall hangings from VHS tape, some of it from defense department training tapes. Laboriously unwinding the black tape, texturing it and then shaping it — sometimes plaiting it — she makes dark, monstrous things to show us. Julia explains that her work is an expression of her "reactions to world events, a product of time focusing on news reported violence" that it is a reflection of "how society receives information about war and violence through the media."

She records her own response to that information and seeks to connect to her audience, "to find one other person that feels the same way I do." She hopes to "evoke a visceral response initially with the beauty of the craft and secondly in the realization of the subversive content within the work."


Julia's braided VHS tape sculpture. Photograph by Aaron Paden.
In my case she succeeded entirely. I am fortunate to have seen and touched these objects; I am very moved by their beauty and by the horrors they represent. I want to dance with them and even experimented a little with one piece in her studio, moving with it, draping it over my body.

As a dancer, I have been reflecting for many years now on the role of artists during times of crisis. We are living in a time of chronic disaster, so much for so long, that many of my fellow US citizens are not even able to respond. Worse yet, the Bush regime, supported by the corporate media, is doing what it can to keep people from responding, from being fully present in this world. I am not alone in calling our short attention span and our blindness to what our country is doing by its right name: denial. As a nation, we are like an alcoholic’s friends and family who refuse to see that there is a terrible problem that is only growing worse. The elephant is indeed dead in the living room, but we act as though it were not; some of us genuinely can't see it.

Julia can see it. Furthermore, she refuses not to see it and so does what she can to show it to anyone else who might be willing to see it. She may not have much hope, but she certainly has courage.

Though much younger than I, she has shown me an excellent way for an artist to respond to the crises of our time. As a person, not qua artist, I have actively resisted the invasion and occupation of Iraq and the torture, crimes against humanity, and abrogation of constitutional rights perpetrated by the Bush regime. While at Camp Casey in Bush's Texas hometown in August of 2006, I protested the war with many others. Camp Casey was where Cindy Sheehan made her stand in the blazing heat. I danced as part of the memorial to our service personnel who have died — that sea of crosses, stars of David, and crescents that represent each life lost. I did not go there to dance, but I was asked to do so for one of the evening vigils. It was a moving experience for me. The seeds of what became Winter Soldier were definitely being sown there at that time.


Julia's rug and wall hanging on display.
Photograph by Aaron Paden.
An American born jazz musician who lives and works in Paris was also at Camp Casey and played at another one of the vigils. He drove me to the airport when it was time for us to leave. He just seemed to assume that of course we would make work that would somehow represent our experiences there. I was not so sure I would or what kind of work mine might be if I did.

Since then, I have participated in many protests with other like minded persons: kneeling in an orange jumpsuit on the sidewalk in front of Macy's in December with holiday shoppers on one side and the NYPD on the other; standing in the cold rain on Union Square with huge “No Torture” signs; marching with others from Times Square to Union Square chanting "No more torture, no more war, Bush and Cheney out the door." However I have not yet made any art that begins to reflect my experience the way Julia's does hers.

I am contemplating a piece for which I have applied for funding. It will be based on the traditional biblical story of Judith, the heroine — a woman of faith and courage who saves her people when the elders and army fail. I want to use her story as a vehicle for exploring what faith and courage might look like today. Surely the events in her life will focus on seeing the truth, as Julia Karll does, no matter how ugly. And, as Judith did, it will require taking action.

I see the story as a classic allegory: Holophernes is the agent of the greedy and arrogant Nebuchadnezzar. Both men are motivated by those human defects which are driven by their fear of not getting what they want, of losing what they have, all the while resenting others and their place in the world. As an imperfect human being, I have my own experience with those same enemies within. However for me, the crisis is within so the key to a better world is to engage successfully with my internal enemies first. The Judith I see does just that and lives to dance with joy and usher in an era of peace in her land.

Maybe having seen the truth that Julia shows, I will be able to complete this dance work. I need to find some hope for a better world.

Last year, Julia Karll showed her work in Auburn, NY, St. Louis and at multiple locations in Kansas. This year, Julia will exhibit at the Kimmel Gallery, located in the Public Library in Nebraska City. She will also be part of the PlatteForum show from August 1st-30th, purposefully coinciding with the Democratic National Convention in Denver. While there, she will teach a course for adults in June called "Creating Content with Craft." In January 2009, she will have a show in Portland, Oregon as part of the New Iconoclasts exhibit at the Hoffman Gallery. – Ed.


About the Author
Nancy Van Ness, founder and Director of the American Creative Dance group in New York City, is a 61 year old modern dancer who has taken up tango in recent years. Always serious about dance, she went to Buenos Aires to study with one of the greatest maestros of that form. Having spent decades in a unitard in small black box theaters making "high art," she is now sometimes seen in slinky dresses dancing tango con alma y pasión in tango salons and at international dance concerts.

As an unexpected result of her tango dancing, she was cast as the female lead in Tango Passion, a romantic comedy set in a tango salon. Tango Passion is now being featured at film festivals, most recently at the 2007 Boston International Film Festival. Van Ness says, “It is a romantic comedy about people my age instead of young lovers. I took on the role partly to confront stereotypes about who is lovable, who is attractive, who is even visible in our culture.” Filled with many surprises, it is about a couple whose relationship has definitely not lost the spice of life.

Van Ness was, however, shocked to find that the medium works in ways she hadn’t understood before. The exhibit "Dangerous Beauty" at the Chelsea Art Museum elucidated what was troubling her about having played the role of the luscious Claudia in the film.

Van Ness created an innovative, avant garde system of dance and musical accompaniment for her company, American Creative Dance. The troupe’s dance work requires performers to be creators; they do not perform dance classics. All dancers use their own bodies to make art, they do not have an impersonal instrument such as the musician, the painter, or the writer does. But using one’s body as a tool involves risk. Dancers in this troupe create their work in plain view under the audience's eyes. For further information please visit American Creative Dance.

Nancy Van Ness lives in New York City.

Comments (2)

Dear Nancy,

Thank you for featuring Julia’s work and for showing just how vital artwork is as a form of protest. I couldn’t help but think of Kurt Joss’ anti-war ballet, “The Green Table,” which chillingly portrays not only the tragedies of war, but also the decisions made by the brutish politicians who are often far removed from the realities of the wars they create.


I too believe our country is in denial. And artistic expression is vital for lifting the veil so we can see. Keep dancing and writing. For every person you impact, there is more hope.

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