A ‘Salon’ where the outcasts are in
Lezley Saar’s works use surrealism and symbolism to explore gender and identity.
Inspired by the Parisian salons frequented by social outsiders in the 19th century, mixed-media artist Lezley Saar named her latest exhibition, on view now at the California African American Museum in Exposition Park, “Salon des Refusés.”
“I took that title and I used it to mean a salon of portraits of rejected people — people who’d been ostracized or outside the mainstream of what’s considered to be normal,” said Saar, a Los Angeles native. “I often work with themes like that, people who are anomalous with regards to race, gender or mental and spiritual aspects.”
On view through Feb. 18, “Salon des Refusés” features works from the last five
years and consists of three series: Madwoman in the Attic/Madness in the Gaze, which explores the mental realm; Gender Renaissance, which explores the physical realm; and Monad, which explores the spiritual realm.
Since the ’90s, the 64year-old artist has worked with paint, fabric and found objects to make commentary on “hybridity, acceptance and belonging.” Inspired by a love of literature, Saar uses mixed media to depict the lives of marginalized figures and to explore Edwardian and Gothic themes. After creating book covers and illustrations for writer friends, Saar began crafting altered book works carved out of old books and containing her own paintings, dioramas and collages.
“I like the idea of a painting sucking you in like when you really get sucked in by a good book,” she said. “I use that kind of metaphor as a vehicle for doing my art.”
A common theme in Saar’s work is identity, inspired in no small part by her “neurologically atypical” transgender son, who has been transitioning from female to male for the past five years, the process of which inspired Saar’s Gender Renaissance series.
“It just got me to thinking about the ways I’ve always thought about race,” said Saar. “Just really questioning these notions of gender. Is it really what you are inside? As opposed to how you’re perceived by others. It’s been a really interesting journey, and I wanted to do it from my experiences, which have been a tad surreal. That’s why there’s surrealism worked into the symbolism and imagery in that series.”
Race frequently informs Saar’s work. The artist, who grew up largely among her mother’s side of the family, is the daughter of black artist Betye Saar and white art conservationist father Richard Saar. “I’ve always been this anomaly of someone who is black but looks white, and I’ve always questioned the notion of race,” said Saar. “Is it how you are perceived by others or is it who you are as far as your heritage and experiences? I think it’s the latter.”
“I don’t only do portraits of black people, but usually everybody looks mixed or black or something other than white,” Saar continued. “I feel since me walking around does not present it, I can present it in my art.”
Here, the artist explains some of the CAAM portraits in her own words:
“Miss Pearly, the Transcontinental Mindreader,” Gender Renaissance series
“This banner is the last one I completed. It’s from a series of portraits of people that are either transgender or gender fluid or gender nonconforming. And even though this is a very current issue, and something currently that I am dealing with, I like setting things in the past to make a current social comment because it gives it a little bit of distance and is maybe not quite as heavy-handed or corny.
“I like jumping from a really tiny scale like the Monad paintings to large [scale] just to keep my tips on fire. I like for there to be a sense of melancholy and stillness. Most of my paintings are really still. Kind of how I am. I often do portraits of people with albinism as a metaphor for myself, someone who’s black but looks white. And I just like aesthetically how they look.
“She’s someone from my imagination. I had a lot of fun sewing the banner from old trims and fabric I got at Joann’s but really giving it a look from the 19th century, the 1800s. That part’s easy and fun, the painting part is harder.”
“Vesta the Johnny,” Gender Renaissance series
“This one was an actual person called Vesta the Johnny. Her name was Vesta Tilley, but Vesta the Johnny was the name she went by. She was a vaudeville performer who performed in drag. Again, it’s the upheaval, kind of throwing things upside down. It’s sort of surreal in that sense, but it’s also symbolic in the sense of birth and rebirth. Reinventing oneself.”
“Forbidden Fruit,” Gender Renaissance series
“This one’s also one of the recent ones going more towards symbolism; the other ones are more surrealistic. I just wanted something really dark and Gothic. You don’t see a lot of that with a black or mixed perspective.
“I just wanted this sense of mystery, this mysterious stormy night and the whole symbolism of the snake which can represent so many things from fertility to death.
“In this case, with the Gender Renaissance series, it’s someone who’s gender ambiguous or gender fluid holding this snake, which represents the future. Instead of an apple it’s [holding] a glowing sci-fi orb, sort of like her looking into her future and the idea of creating oneself. The whole creativity of being trans is really interesting to me.
“I know with my kid he would get so upset if he was misgendered, so instead of trying to present that literally, I do it with the surrealist imagery.”