LINCOLN, MASS.- DeCordova Sculpture Park and Museum is presenting Sheila Pepe: Hot Mess Formalism, featuring more than seventy works of art including large-scale fiber installations, sculptures, works on paper, and video. The exhibition, organized by Phoenix Art Museum, sheds light on Pepes practice as it developed in the 1980s to the present. It is on view through March 20, 2019.
Hot Mess Formalism celebrates an under-recognized artist who has played an important role as thinker, innovator, and mentor within the field of contemporary art for almost thirty years. The first mid-career survey of Pepes work, it examines how the artist plays with feminist and craft traditions to counter patriarchal notions of art making. While Pepe incorporates personal and cultural narratives into her work, she also invites a broad range of viewers interpretations.
Sheila Pepes installations are energizing and challenging: they spill onto and around architecture and in so doing, often reveal biases embedded within institutions or artistic mediums, says deCordova Curator Sarah Montross. Her fiber pieces are never installed the same way twice, so were eagerly anticipating how they will respond to and be influenced by deCordovas galleriesand how our visitors, in turn, respond to and are influenced by the exhibition.
Pepe is best known for her fiber-based, site-specific installations that challenge preconceived notions of domestic crafts, such as crocheting and womens work. These web-like structures intervene in architectural spaces and galleries, creating volumes, lines, and shadows that are always subject to the changing conditions of the environments they occupy. At deCordova, the works wind between two separate floors of the buildingup staircases and within multiple galleries, creating an immersive and colorful experience for visitors.
The exhibition also includes an extensive selection of the artists sculptural assemblages known as her Votive Moderns, dating from as far back as 1994. These works are made out of disparate media ranging from found, industrially manufactured materialslike rubber bands, wires, springs, and plasticsto ceramics and plasters.
Installations and themes featured in Hot Mess Formalism include:
Women are Bricks (Mobile Bricks): This piecea grid of triangular-shaped bricks on ceramic rollers placed atop a used carpetjoins feminist methods of gathering, mobility, and resistance with a post-Minimalist sculptural vocabulary. Pepes unexpected arrangement of a domestic object and handmade bricks also complicates long-held assumptions around masculinity and labor.
Put me down Gently (2014): The improvisational, drawing-like quality of Pepes work is intertwined with her use of techniques and materials linked to family traditions. These include crochet, a skill passed down from her mother, and shoelaces that reference her grandfathers work as a cobbler. Works such as Put me down Gently (2014, pictured right) are never installed the same way, as they always respond to the particular characteristics of the galleries in which they are placed.
91 BCE ⌛ Not So Good for Emperors: The artist invited volunteers to help her create this work at the Phoenix Art Museum for this traveling exhibitionan example of her long-standing engagement with collective and participatory making.
Pepe has strong, ongoing connections to New England. Many of the artworks in this exhibition were made while she lived in the area, both for educational projects or museum exhibitions. For example, Pepe created Women are Bricks (Mobile Bricks) for her BFA thesis project at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design, and Put me down Gently is a site-specific installation she first installed at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston in 2015.
Montross adds, Bringing this traveling exhibition to deCordova is like a homecoming for Sheila Pepe, who spent many years in the New England region as a student, professor, and exhibiting artist. Like the webbed forms of her massive installations, Sheila has created networks of friends and followers in the area. We are also delighted to introduce her work to new audiences and foreground her many contributions across Massachusetts and beyond.
Pepe earned a BFA in Ceramics from Massachusetts College of Art and Design, Boston, and an MFA from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts University. She was also a fellow at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University, from 1997 to 1998, and has held teaching positions at many area institutions, including Rhode Island School of Design, Brandeis University, and Williams College.