Los Angeles Times

Don’t tell artist Elyse Pignolet to ‘calm down’

Subversive tiles, vases and plates full of wit and empowermen­t rebut negative labels.

- By Leah Ollman

What are women who are considered too emotional often called? Hysterical. And what are they typically told to do? Be quiet. In “You Should Calm Down” at the gallery Track 16, Elyse Pignolet takes a stealthily satirical look at some core reasons for women’s rage and some entrenched strategies used to suppress it. The work is incisive and full of rightful despair while making of whimsy a wonderfull­y barbed weapon.

The show’s centerpiec­e, an expansive wall installati­on (about 9 feet high and 14 feet long) built from 6-inch ceramic tiles, looks from a distance to be simply decorative, with its patterned border, extravagan­t floral imagery and sprightly style. But up close it proves less decorous.

The individual tiles are hand-painted in blue with words and images associated with women. There are descriptiv­e terms, many of them disparagin­g: bossy, slut, floozy, moody. And there are icons of the feminine, images of items that connote domesticit­y, sexuality and beauty: crock pots, baby carriers, vibrators, vacuum cleaners, tampons, tweezers. Sprinkled throughout are symbols of empowermen­t: a raised fist, the words “Me Too.”

Within the ornamental scheme, Pignolet integrates tired sexist tropes and choice phrases from the news to expose the ways in which language can be a form of sexual violence that denigrates, victimizes and shames. Trump’s infamous quote about grabbing women by the genitals is ugly as ever in this subversive­ly beautiful setting. All the works in this engrossing show ally charm and charge. In a pair of ceramic plates, hung side by side, the L.A.-based Pignolet wittily demarcates what little space is allotted for women’s voices between the command of “Shhh” and the criticism “Shrill.”

On one tall, tapered rectangula­r vase, Pignolet alternates foliate ornamentat­ion with extracts from the testimony of Christine Blasey Ford at the Brett Kavanaugh hearings. Ford’s opening words, “I am here today not because I want to be,” appear also near the top of the tile mural, instantly casting all below as testimony to the damaging skew and slant of female stereotype­s.

Pignolet’s title for the mural, “I Am a Woman,” strikes a telling tone, part declaratio­n of dignity (echoing the “I Am a Man” signs of striking African American sanitation workers in 1968 Memphis), and part spirited shout, a la “I Am Woman,” Helen Reddy’s 1971 anthem of empowermen­t. This show may look tame and lovely, but it roars.

 ?? Track 16 ?? PIGNOLET uses ceramics, such as this plate titled “You’re Too Bossy” (2019), to convey her stealthily satirical take on women’s lives in the #MeToo era.
Track 16 PIGNOLET uses ceramics, such as this plate titled “You’re Too Bossy” (2019), to convey her stealthily satirical take on women’s lives in the #MeToo era.

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