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Muriel Hasbun & Caroline Lacey, Calling to You

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Calling to You is comprised of two bodies of photographic work by two artists with complementary, yet distinct, visions. One photographer is a mentor and teacher; the other, a student developing her own voice. Hasbun was Lacey’s teacher at the Corcoran College of Art + Design, as well as the founder of Laberinto Projects created both to honor the work of her mother, Janine Janowski, a pioneer and stalwart supporter of contemporary art in El Salvador, and to promote the art of Central America in the U.S. (home to 2 million Salvadorans). Janowski founded Galería El Laberinto in San Salvador in 1977 at the onset of the Civil War. Lacey now serves as assistant director for Laberinto Projects.

Calling to You is about the individual — yet frequently shared — work of Hasbun and Lacey that honors a legacy. Both artists agree that the lines of mentorship, authorship, learning and teaching are constantly blurred and crossing. They think it is more like choreography in a complicated dance to remember, identify, and communicate in a world that often loses its roots and creators.

As photographers and co-workers, Hasbun and Lacey share a near constant feedback loop of critique and questioning. And while Laberinto Projects and its mission to serve artists and communities across socio-cultural and national divides is an exercise in openness, which has led to learning and sharing on both sides, their artwork has remained individual. But each calls to the other, formally and through subject matter. A collaboration of mutual respect, their partnership requires a constant defining of the self and personal boundaries. Hasbun says their work together is “like mapping the labyrinth.”

Hasbun’s series, si je meurs/if I die, continues the conversation against silence and erasure that the artist has had with her mother through her work for the past thirty years, extending beyond her mother’s death a few years ago. Hasbun is convinced that art and culture and the work of memory have intrinsic value, and begin at the personal level of engagement. According to her, “As in earlier series, I discover, examine, and reconfigure an archive that brings the personal and the collective together, weaving a dialogue with the intimate, individual story that gives perspective to the historically-significant, public narrative of Janine’s life as a cultural promoter in El Salvador during the civil war and its aftermath, now reactivated through my socially engaged platform of laberinto projects. Both projects are inextricably bound: preserving her legacy in both intimate and public ways reinforces my belief in the power of art to construct a first person narrative that affirms an individual’s own history and culture, while galvanizing communities with a sense of collective identity.”

Lacey’s series Entrusted is based on work in two private, yet community collections of art: The Corcoran Gallery of Art in D.C., and Janowski’s Galería El Laberinto in El Salvador. Like Hasbun’s, her series is about legacy, memory, and the intimate nature of learning. Most of her images in some way document someone else’s artwork in situ, serving as a document of each in its place, or home. Like that of the Corcoran, Laberinto is of national import, but its accumulation and preservation is based on the work of private individuals. Neither is a government-sanctioned endeavor. Individuals can chose to dismantle or ignore the history, effort, and potential of these collections and let destruction come; or they can seek to preserve, strengthen, and reinforce this shared history to inspire what is next.

Muriel Hasbun & Caroline Lacey, Calling to You
Through October 22, 2016
Civilian Art Projets
4718 14th St NW
Washington, DC 20011
USA

http://www.civilianartprojects.com/

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