From
the beginning Allen-Efstathiou was the most unusual fusion of things;
her mother was from an old Maine family and her father from East
Kentucky's Appalachian Mountains. By the age of five she had already
lived in such diverse locations as Orono, Maine; Athens, Georgia;
Bronx, New York and Larchmont, New York. In this nomadic approach,
Allen-Efstathiou compresses several lives into one:
The
dislocations in my life and cultural history (growing up in Maine
and New York and then living in Greece for many years) have influenced
my work, which frequently includes unusual juxtapositions of cultural
motifs. I am interested in how small, seemingly random details
can speak as incidental markers of an individual, a culture, an
era. I examine that which lies on the margins of these cultural
narratives - the contents of an old trunk, a jewelry box or a
handbag - focusing on the tangential and the overlooked.
The
Botanical Series was inspired by family stories of Allen's
great-grandmother, Eliza Neeley, a healer in the Appalachian Mountains
of Kentucky, who was said to have had knowledge of herbal remedies
and the power of healing hands:
"In
the Botanical Series, I isolate, enlarge and repeat images
of wildflowers and medicinal plants linking them to domestic rituals
with titles like house dress and prom dress. The healing and edible
plants of Spring, such as chamomile, nettles and mallows become
the patterns on faded housedresses and sun-dresses. The dried
thistle and thorns of summer on the more formal behave-yourself
clothes like prom dresses and wedding dresses. I describe historical
and sacred sites with the vernacular of random graffiti left by
past visitors, and the chance wildflowers growing from walls.
The
Stitched Together Series honors five generations of artists
in Allen-Efstathiou's family from her great-grandparents to her
daughter:
In
the Stitched Together Series I create composites of personal and
cultural identification by appropriating images from artwork created
over a span of a century by members of my family. For example
I might combine a Victorian era drawing of my great-grandfather
and figure studies from the '30s by my mother with the stitching
of an Appalachian quilt made by my grandmother.
In
the Contents of her Handbag Series, I present the random
contents of a handbag as a portrait of the owner, her culture
and her era."
In
this way, shifting the scale and context of these images blurs the
lines between public and private, personal and historical to reveal
an articulation of place that more closely mirrors our own experience,
fleeting, migratory, absurd at times but always populated by these
markers.
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Running
dog
Botanical
Series
(Wedding dress)
Stitched
Together Series
Contents
of her Handbag Series
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