Los Angeles Times

FINDING HER PLACE ON EARTH

Anna Maria Maiolino speaks up to make sure no one is pushed away from a spot on this clay planet.

- By Carolina A. Miranda carolina.miranda@latimes.com Twitter: @cmonstah

The performanc­e begins with raw eggs. Dozens of them, scattered in their fragile shells across the sculpture plaza adjacent to the Museum of Contempora­ry Art in downtown Los Angeles.

The audience gathers around. Out of the crowd emerges a petite woman with fine features and white, closely cropped hair. She studiously arranges the onlookers with a series of gestures. Moving them in closer, setting them back, motioning the seated to stand.

Artist Anna Maria Maiolino first staged this performanc­e, “Entrevidas,” in 1981 in a cobbleston­e street in São Paulo, Brazil, where she walked barefoot through a minefield of raw eggs with her eyes closed. It came at a charged period in her country’s history: toward the end of a brutal military dictatorsh­ip that had quelled free speech and resulted in disappeara­nces and other human rights abuses.

“There is the saying ‘like walking on eggshells,’ ” Maiolino says. “In that moment, we didn’t know if the country would open up or if it would close itself off.”

It was a perfect metaphor for that political time: Each step forward, however gingerly taken, held the possibilit­y of great destructio­n.

The MOCA performanc­e of “Entrevidas,” part of the Pacific Standard Time: LA / LA series of exhibition­s, is more joyous. But not without moments of tension.

A young man appears. Gabriel Sitchin, the artist’s grandson, has been enlisted to perform.

Sitchin closes his eyes and sets a foot between two eggs. He draws another foot into the egg maze, and another, using his toes to grope the ground before him in his temporary blindness. The crowd, previously engaged in raucous conversati­on, grows silent.

At one point, Sitchin’s heel comes dangerousl­y close to crushing an egg and Maiolino gasps. A little girl exclaims, “Yes! Yes! Yes!” Sitchin moves his foot and the egg survives. The crowd exhales.

The actor eventually comes to rest on one side of the maze. He opens his eyes and the crowd erupts into applause. Grandmothe­r and grandson smile and exchange knowing looks.

Maiolino, 75, has been little known in the U.S. But as of late, her profile has grown.

She is the subject of a one-woman retrospect­ive at the MOCA on Grand Avenue, her first in the U.S. Her work also makes an appearance in two high-profile group shows: The Hammer Museum’s “Radical Women” focuses on avant-garde Latin American female artists; “Delirious,” a new exhibition at New York’s Metropolit­an Museum of Art, examines the ways in which 20th century artists responded to overbearin­g political systems with work that was often surreal and absurd.

A conceptual artist whose multimedia work often explores issues of repression and yearning, Maiolino is generally identified as Brazilian. But her heritage spans continents.

The artist was born in Italy during World War II to an Italian father and an Ecuadorean mother. When she was 12, the family emigrated to Venezuela. Six years later, they relocated to Brazil. In the late 1960s, she became a Brazilian citizen.

Seated in MOCA’s Grand Avenue galleries over the summer, where she was installing the retrospect­ive that bears her name, she conducts our interview in Spanish — one that bears musical lilts of Italian and Portuguese.

Maiolino’s art, like her origins, is also hybrid.

“My work developed in Brazil,” she says. “People consider me as being Brazilian. But it has many layers, like an onion.”

The eye-grabber at her MOCA retrospect­ive is a gallery filled with pieces of unfired clay: a wall covered in squashed blobs, giant piles of spaghetti-like viscera in mounds on the floor, a table filled with lumpy protuberan­ces and intestinal forms — as if a massive clay body has come apart and its myriad parts put on display.

On the day we meet at the museum, MOCA’s pristine white box has been transforme­d into a raucous ceramics studio with the fragrance of damp earth. Maiolino, in a stained apron, stands at its center — shaping, molding, coaxing form out of inert blocks.

“They feed me,” she says, gesturing to the clay around her. “I get a materialit­y when I come into contact with clay. … Tierra modelada — that’s what it is to me: shaped earth. The viewers, if they are sensitive, they will find in this accumulati­on of work, their own work, the gestures they repeat daily.”

In 2012 as part of Documenta 13, the every-five-years exhibition held in Kassel, Germany, the artist filled every available surface in a former gardener’s home with her unfired clay forms.

MOCA curator Helen Molesworth, who organized Maiolino’s L.A. retrospect­ive with researcher Bryan Barcena, recalls being bowled over by the installati­on.

“Clay is one of the most rudimentar­y mediums, yet it’s also the beginning of civilizati­on,” she says. “Any monkey can make a finger pot, but you can’t have civilizati­on without pottery. She’s always in this place where you can’t privilege one side over another side.”

But Maiolino’s work is about much more than clay.

Over the course of a career more than five decades long, the artist has employed printing, photograph­y, performanc­e, video and sculpture. In muted and visceral ways, she’s explored her place in the world as woman, as citizen, as a human body filled with hunger pangs, both physical and psychologi­cal.

“A Espera,” an assemblage from 1967, shows the silhouette of a woman hovering over a line of laundry bearing children’s clothes. Other pieces map, in diagrammat­ic ways, elements of her life. “Eu” from 1971 — “eu” is Portuguese for “I” — repeats the word at different angles over the course of a grid.

“Much of my work has has to do with mental state, with my biological state as a woman,” Maiolino says. “Women have always been prohibited from speaking in the first person. A woman is never the universal. When I put the word ‘eu,’ that was when I decided what I would be. It was a determinat­ion.”

Other works address the coercive politics of Brazil’s military regime. (Her developmen­tal years paralleled the dictatorsh­ip, which lasted from 1964 to 1985.) In a 1974 photo installati­on on view at MOCA and the Hammer, she depicts herself wielding a pair of scissors, about to cut off her nose and her tongue.

“That was a reaction,” she says. “There was such great repression: Just cut my tongue, poke out my eyes because I can do nothing.”

Maiolino’s unusual path can be traced to her teenage years in Venezuela. Like many young women then in Caracas, she was dispatched to secretaria­l school by her parents. But instead of studying dictation, Maiolino would often sneak into an upstairs hall that offered art classes.

“It was this beautiful classroom and a nun taught drawing and she had these vases full of roses,” she recalls. “My parents were so crazy they didn’t notice that I never got a secretaria­l degree.”

As an immigrant in Venezuela, she had always felt hampered by her foreignnes­s and her imperfect Spanish. But with drawing, she could speak freely.

“I was reconstitu­ting my identity, my ego,” she says. “I started to recuperate myself.”

But just as she was settling into the rhythms of life there, the family relocated — this time to Brazil. In 1960, at age 18, she was once again the outsider, starting in a new language and landscape all over again.

Enrolling in university was complicate­d by her language skills. So Maiolino decided to audit classes instead — at the Escola Nacional de Belas Artes, the national fine art school in Rio de Janeiro. It was there that she met painter Rubens Gerchman. They soon married and had two children.

During these early years as an artist, Maiolino produced drawings, assemblage­s and woodblock prints that began to establish themes she was interested in: images that mapped her place in society as well as abstracted figures frequently depicted with an open mouth. In the assemblage “Glu Glu Glu,” from 1967, for example, a head attached to a human digestive system seems ready to devour everything in sight.

“The mouth stuff is interestin­g because she is a migrant,” Molesworth says. “Her mouth has to eat new food and say new words. The profundity of culture being linked to food and language has real truth.”

In 1968, Maiolino and Gerchman moved to New York temporaril­y after Gerchman was awarded a fellowship. It was a way to escape the repressive­ness of Brazil — “like a self-exile,” she says.

In those years, she was more devoted to practical concerns: her husband and her children. She also worked illegally as a fabric designer. “If they wanted pineapples, I’d make pineapples,” she said. “I never signed my designs because I never wanted to be a fabric designer. It was just a way to make money.”

Upon her return to Brazil, she divorced Gerchman. “And I decided that I would be a mother and artist with the same importance,” she says.

The ’70s happened to be a period of wild experiment­ation. Artists were working in performanc­e, video and ephemeral installati­on, and Maiolino dived right in. She made surreal Super 8 films, such as “In-Out (Antropofag­ia)” from 1973, in which mouths chew objects, say words and birth an egg. She also staged actions, such as the egg field of “Entrevidas.” (Eggs, a symbol of fragility and fecundity, make regular appearance­s in her work.)

In the ’80s, she married for a second time — to conceptual artist Victor Grippo. But that union ended in divorce in 1989. Afterward, Maiolino says she made a decision to dedicate herself fully to her work.

“I lived on $200 a month, and I paid basic expenses, but that was it,” she says. “My friends would call me to go out and I’d make things up. Everything — the taxi, the beer, you have to earn it. I wanted to have a chance not to worry. That was when I started using cement because it was very cheap, then clay.”

That austerity led to an artistic flowering that continues to this day.

Part of what has made her stand out is the range of media she uses but also the pragmatic ways in which she has approached womanhood in her work.

“She is not sentimenta­l,” Molesworth says. “She recognizes: Human beings, they fornicate. Half of them could be made pregnant. There are babies, and they need to be fed and cared for. The survival of the species is this modus operandi that exceeds all of us.”

Maiolino says she has come to terms with the feeling of being the perennial outsider.

“When you are 25 or 28, you want to belong,” she says. “But then you learn that identity mutates. You have a lot of identities, and they change over time.

“I arrive at what I have through experience. Art gives you that experience. That is art — it enriches you.”

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 ?? Photograph­s by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? “I GET a materialit­y when I come into contact with clay,” says Anna Maria Maiolino, shown at MOCA. “Tierra modelada — that’s what it is to me: shaped earth.”
Photograph­s by Francine Orr Los Angeles Times “I GET a materialit­y when I come into contact with clay,” says Anna Maria Maiolino, shown at MOCA. “Tierra modelada — that’s what it is to me: shaped earth.”
 ?? Carolina A. Miranda Los Angeles Times ?? MAIOLINO, in foreground, watches grandson Gabriel Sitchin perform “Entrevidas,” in which he walks through a field of raw eggs with his eyes closed. It’s part of Pacific Standard Time: LA / LA.
Carolina A. Miranda Los Angeles Times MAIOLINO, in foreground, watches grandson Gabriel Sitchin perform “Entrevidas,” in which he walks through a field of raw eggs with his eyes closed. It’s part of Pacific Standard Time: LA / LA.

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