Image Not Available
Broken Column: Mother
Artist: Kathy Vargas (American, born 1950)
Date: 1997, print 2004
Dimensions:
(Sheet) H: 24 in. (61 cm); W: 20 in. (50.8 cm)
Medium: Hand colored gelatin silver print.
Classification: Photographs
Credit Line: Gift of the the Toledo Friends of Photography and Stephen Johnston in honor of his grandparents Elsie and Stephen J. Rutkai
Object number: 2005.1E
Label Text:Layers of images unite childhood, age, death, and religion in Kathy Vargas’s hand-colored photographs. Broken Column: Mother, arranged in the shape of a cross, celebrates and mourns the artist’s mother, seen lying on her deathbed. X-rays of her spine, superimposed with thorny branches, make up the center sections. Feathers suggest angels’ wings, while roses symbolize both love and mourning.
Vargas’s Mexican-American heritage plays a significant role in her art. The title, Broken Column, refers to a self-portrait by Mexican artist Frida Kahlo (1907-1954), in which Kahlo depicts herself with a shattered architectural column for a spine. The attitude towards death in Vargas’s imagery—sad, morbid, and celebratory at the same time—reflects the Mexican Day of the Dead festival, when deceased relatives are said to return for one day and night. Vargas uses her art to record the memory of what she calls the “‘quicksilver,’ non-solid moments” of life. “After all, art is life,” she explains. “And one always answers death with life.”
© protected by copyright
Vargas’s Mexican-American heritage plays a significant role in her art. The title, Broken Column, refers to a self-portrait by Mexican artist Frida Kahlo (1907-1954), in which Kahlo depicts herself with a shattered architectural column for a spine. The attitude towards death in Vargas’s imagery—sad, morbid, and celebratory at the same time—reflects the Mexican Day of the Dead festival, when deceased relatives are said to return for one day and night. Vargas uses her art to record the memory of what she calls the “‘quicksilver,’ non-solid moments” of life. “After all, art is life,” she explains. “And one always answers death with life.”
© protected by copyright
Not on view