Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)
Visual artists take refuge in their work
NEW YORK » An apple reflected on a lamp. A clock where time seemed to have frozen. Nurses dressed more like astronauts on Mars.
Irene Pressner keeps “flashes” of her experience after contracting the coronavirus. The conceptual artist and photographer from Venezuela was close to death in New York City. After suffering severe pain and fainting a few times, she was finally admitted to a hospital. A few days after her hospitalization, her husband was also admitted. Only she survived.
Now in recovery and mourning, the artist continues experimenting to see how the virus changes her art. But in her case she knows it won’t be dark: “My works have light, but now will also have the burden of what I lived.”
Affected by the pandemic, many visual artists are taking refuge in their work in search of sense and solace. Some have suffered the horror, the sickness and the loss firsthand. Others are channeling their anguish and their fear, their feelings of loneliness.
Pressner has tried to make some sense of the whole thing. Art, like many other times in her life, is helping her to heal. First she took on photography. Then came painting, with subjects including an apple reflected on a lamp of her apartment — the first thing she saw when she opened her eyes once after fainting. More recently, she created a series of angels in tribute to those “angels of flesh and bone” who came to support her.
Pressner said the art she is making now may not be representative of her career, but it’s what is coming out in this period of self-discovery. She notes a series of photographs she did shortly before she got sick, “We Are Not Islands,” gained new meaning during her isolation.
“The other works are transitional, like I have not found myself yet,” said the artist, who has been recognized in her home country and the U.S., including at the Museum of Latin American Art in Long Beach, California, where her award-winning “Felix” is part of the permanent collection.
In Brooklyn, photographer Lara Alcántara dealt with the anxiety of having her husband on the front lines as an anesthesiologist — while taking care of her house and her two daughters, 12 and 7 — creating a fantasy world in images she publishes almost daily on her Instagram account.
They are carefully staged selfportraits. Some reflect her fatigue humorously: She appears stuck in a washing machine, ironing her head or buried in a pile of toys. Others show her passion for fashion — in one image she hangs from a hanger between the clothes in her closet — or art and literature, with nods to the “Girl with a Pearl Earring,” “The Last Supper” and “The Little Prince.”
“Photography has usually been the way that I express any distress, anything that is going on in my life, and I think that now it was extra important for me to go out to this creative world that I invented,” said Alcántara, a Venezuelan in New York who also works in public relations and as an actor.
“The escape of photography was completely necessary,” she emphasized, noting that the news, and the stories that her husband would bring home overwhelmed her.