-'The Salt in Sugar: A Portrait of Shug Avery'
When
I first learned the theme for this particular exhibit, I knew
immediately from which Alice Walker's renown and respected works I
wanted to draw my inspiration....
I read 'The Color Purple' in
college, and can still well recall, even now decades later, the strong
impressions it made upon me at the time. The tale, with its sweeping
narrative, rich characterization and intimate portrayal of African
American womanhood in the Depression-era rural south, truly made me
appreciative of the insights into a world so very different from my
own, and within a few pages I found myself absorbed. Particularly engrossing
to me was the fiery character of Shug Avery, a passionate free-spirit
and non-conformist who refused to submit to the social conventions,
limitations and rules set upon her sex and race by the culture into
which she was born. A sassy, sultry blues singer, Shug, with her
confidence, glamor, pride and unwillingness to suffer fools gladly,
represents freedom and empowerment to her friend, Celie -- Shug's shy, insecure and long-suffering counterpoint. Though Celie and Shug's relationship gets off to an
initial rocky start thanks to Shug's jealousy, with Shug eventually
offering Celie the excuse of "That's just the salt in Sugar..." for her
previously rude behavior, in time the two become inextricably linked
together, and create a bond so long-lasting and strong it builds Celie's
self-worth, giving her a precious sense of identity, and in turn allowing
her to liberate herself from an unhappy existence of chronic
mistreatment, oppression and pain.
For my entry, I wished to create a portrait of Shug Avery to truly
express the many complexities of her most extraordinary character. Celie
is first introduced to Shug via a photograph -- a portrait of Shug that intrigues, compels and fascinates Celie well
before they actually meet. I imagine a creased, vintage, hand-colored,
black-and-white publicity still, tattered and torn but chock-full of the jazz-age glamor of the
time, complete with an expression and style for the fictional Shug to boldly
reflect her complicated nature and conflicting personality traits. This is my attempt to represent the indomitable Shug Avery in all her glory of
confidence, pride, beauty, strength, sexuality, temper, humor, intelligence,
irreverence, compassion, and loving selfishness.....
--Painted in acrylics on an 8 x 10 Paper Canvas-Panel I constructed myself, with built-up overlapping layers of paper for a highly textured and dimensional effect.... Detail Image
In an reclaimed vintage frame I recently salvaged.....
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