Baltimore Sun Sunday

Baltimore’s Scott celebrates Tubman

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has long been best known for works incorporat­ing beads and glasswork. More than 50 examples are included here, displayed indoors on two floors of the Museum Building. But the new Tubmanrela­ted works are likely to make the exhibit all the more magnetic.

“Harriet Tubman has always been there with me,” the artist says. “That’s who I always wanted to be, someone with that kind of grit.”

The grit is literal in the case of the earthwork sculpture titled “Graffiti Harriet,” composed of packed mud and grass and, at 15 feet, Scott’s tallest sculpture to date. This Tubman, too, holds a rifle.

The other avatar is dubbed “Araminta with Rifle and Veve” (Araminta was Tubman’s original first name; a veve is an object from voodoo culture). It started as a clay model that was enlarged and carved out of foam, then encased in resin and fiberglass before the bronze patina was applied.

The sculpture is situated in a little glen-like setting alongside cascading water, which Scott sees as a reminder “of the highways and byways Harriet had to travel.” The ground cover of quilts refers to the warmth they provided and a symbol for “swaddling people in love,” the artist says.

There are also sculpted objects placed about, referencin­g birds and spirits.

Over the past two years, Scott made frequent visits to New Jersey to work on her Tubman pieces. Throughout, she had assistance from the Seward Johnson Atelier and Digital Atelier, which provides 3-D technology to help artists create large-scale sculpture.

Grounds for Sculpture chief curator Tom Moran and other staffers also lent a hand. “Graffiti Harriet” was carved by Clifford Ward, guided by Scott’s drawings. Kyle Psulkowski’s contributi­ons included painting on Tubman’s skirt an excerpt from an 1868 letter Frederick Douglass sent to the Undergroun­d Railroad heroine.

To apply the sculpture’s finishing touches — including a beaded, mask-like face that exhibit co-curator Lowery Stokes Sim says “gives her a ferocious presence” — Scott was hoisted by a scissor lift.

The artist also added an unexpected object at the feet of the sculpture: a small lawn jockey. A quintessen­tial touch from the ever-provocativ­e Scott.

If all goes according to the calculatio­ns, “Graffiti Harriet” will gradually dissipate over the next several months.

“The idea is that it will drop to the ground in a pile, representi­ng Harriet Tubman’s remains,” says Amy Eva Raehse, executive director and curator of Goya Contempora­ry, the Baltimore gallery that represents Scott.

The 14-foot resin rifle, which Scott worked on with artist Austin Wright, will still be there at the end, a reminder of Tubman’s determinat­ion to carry out her mission of leading slaves to freedom.

That this Tubman sculpture will fade while “Araminta” stays firmly in place reflects a point behind Scott’s work.

“Harriet is always fading and resurfacin­g,” the artist says. “And whenever people start to talk about her again, we seem to learn new things. She is so relevant right now, with the proposal to put her on the $20 bill. I used to think they should keep [Andrew] Jackson, but put him on the back so he would have to see Harriet’s [backside] every day, but that might be something he’d like.”

Scott’s tribute to Tubman continues inside the nearby Museum Building in an alcove called “Harriet’s Closet.” The artist has created some objects and gathered together others to provide an imaginativ­e way of revealing a personal side of a woman famed as an emancipato­r, Union Army nurse and spy, social activist and more.

Items of period clothing are displayed, along with a bit of antique furniture. There’s a rifle, of course, but Scott made it of blown glass and embellishe­d it with flowery details. At the center of the room, a huge, vividly beaded quilt seems to spill out of a trunk.

Above the entrance to “Harriet’s Closet” is a finely detailed work of glass and plastic beads that Scott finished just before the exhibit opened: “Harriet Tubman as Buddha.” Here, as Sims puts it, Scott conveys Tubman “transcendi­ng earthly concerns.”

The rest of the indoor portion of the exhibit provides an absorbing survey of Scott’s creative life, as well as wonderful quilts by her late mother, Elizabeth Talford Scott, a pivotal influence on her daughter.

Scott’s familiar themes of race and sexuality are in strong evidence. A series of “mammy”-referencin­g works includes one of a woman attentivel­y holding a white child, while her own child seems to disappear into her long skirt, neglected. The artist’s rape series is doubly potent now, amid heightened awareness of sexual assault.

There is humor, too, in the collection, though always with an edge, reflecting the Scott philosophy printed on one of the gallery’s walls: “I skirt the borders between comedy, pathos, delight and horror.”

Scott’s maneuverin­g through those borders leads her into an extraordin­ary realm all her own. This exhibit, providing such a rich sampling of that realm, makes Grounds for Sculpture an even worthier destinatio­n than usual.

 ?? DAVID MICHAEL HOWARTH ?? Joyce J. Scott in front of her 15-foot earthwork “Graffiti Harriet” at Grounds for Sculpture in Hamilton, N.J. The work is designed to disappear over the next several months. “Joyce J. Scott: Harriet Tubman and Other Truths” runs through April 1 at Grounds for Sculpture, 80 Sculptors Way, Hamilton, N. J. Open Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Timed tickets, $10 to $18, are required. Scott will join journalist David Finkel for a free “MacArthur Fellows in Dialogue” at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 17. Call 609-586-0616, or go to groundsfor­sculpture.org. For informatio­n on the Reginald F. Lewis gala Nov. 11 honoring Scott, go to lewismuseu­m.org
DAVID MICHAEL HOWARTH Joyce J. Scott in front of her 15-foot earthwork “Graffiti Harriet” at Grounds for Sculpture in Hamilton, N.J. The work is designed to disappear over the next several months. “Joyce J. Scott: Harriet Tubman and Other Truths” runs through April 1 at Grounds for Sculpture, 80 Sculptors Way, Hamilton, N. J. Open Tuesdays through Sundays, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Timed tickets, $10 to $18, are required. Scott will join journalist David Finkel for a free “MacArthur Fellows in Dialogue” at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 17. Call 609-586-0616, or go to groundsfor­sculpture.org. For informatio­n on the Reginald F. Lewis gala Nov. 11 honoring Scott, go to lewismuseu­m.org
 ?? JOHN DEAN ?? While carver Clifford Ward looks on, Joyce J. Scott refines facial details on the Tubman earthwork.
JOHN DEAN While carver Clifford Ward looks on, Joyce J. Scott refines facial details on the Tubman earthwork.

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