The Beauty of Tragic Times: An Interview with Susanna Coffey |
By Emile Ferris |
A series of paintings which were exhibited at
Maya Polsky Gallery this past summer focused on the human cost of militarism and
war.
In “Fall,” Susanna Coffey portrays herself wearing a
backwards-turned baseball cap. She stands in front of a city being bombed. A
raging fire glows orange, sparking smaller fires. Dark drips of paint angle down
the canvas, deftly recreating falling flak. The figure’s blue eye-makeup is a
stolen hue. It is the blue of the deceptively peaceful evening shadows. It is
the blue of the columns of chemical smoke rising from the bombardment.
The tension of witnessing the attack is heightened by the fact that we
are looking beyond a rigid face. This is a person who disregards the despoiling
of the world behind her. Whether or not we can hear the screams in that distant
city, we know that there are screams. Uncomfortably, we locate ourselves
mirrored in Coffey’s proud and dispassionate stance.
It is no coincidence that many of Coffey’s works
parallel the devastation of structures with the disintegration of the
individual. Susanna Coffey’s origins make her a painter who innately understands
the integrity and significance of place.
“My father was a construction
worker on roads,” Coffey said. She believes that this early experience inspired
her choice to become a painter.
“It’s the love of materiality and
construction, because paintings are like fantasy constructions...I always knew I
wanted to be an artist, from my very early years, and maybe it has to do with
the making of things, being around when people were making roads and bridges and
mountains and tunnels... It was amazing to watch the people who did things with
their hands and machines. It was very rich and exciting.”
At the age of
nine, Susanna Coffey recalls seeing the Willem DeKooning painting “Excavation.”
Until that time Coffey says she had never seen “an image of
energy.”
“Something about that [painting] merged with my love of the jazz
music and it seemed true to me. The thing that I loved about the construction
sites is that they were about matter and movement of matter. They weren’t images
per se, like a horse or a duck; they were essentially abstract. I think children
love realism, and for me realism was located in an explanation of the spatial
phenomenon of energy—that life is, and children know that life moves and shifts
and that there’s wind and water. Children know all of that and are fascinated by
it. However, there are very few images that communicate that, because a picture
of a stream doesn’t do what a stream does, but a De Kooning might.”
In her twenties, Coffey attended the University
of Connecticut. “It was the seventies, the death of painting. Minimalism: Carl
Andre and Donald Judd were very important and being written about. I liked that
work very much,” states Coffey. But to her, the idea of using non-art materials
for art was not new.
“The rusting Cor-ten steel and the fact that after a
detonation, there’d be a pile of rocks the same size and shape of the hole. That
is very beautiful—the proportions and the wearing away. I’d always seen the
beauty in looking at the sky through culvert pipes. I thought, ‘what’s the big
deal? It looks like art to me.’ It didn’t seem at all ground-breaking and I
understand in retrospect that it was, but it wasn’t for me.”
“I entered
the art world in this odd way, and then I chose to be a painter which was
different than what was going around me at the time—it was a time a little bit
like this time.” Coffey adds, “Painting dies all of the time.”
Yet if one
were to judge by Coffey’s work, painting seems very much alive.
Much of Susanna Coffey’s surfaces have the
quality of chiseled stone or exactingly poured cement. Contoured segments of
color, each artfully bounded, are, in their aggregate, like the bricks in an
exquisite wall.
“I paint a color and a shape in a location. Like some kind of
idiosyncratic survey map [but] the image isn’t my working interest. It had to do
with what kind of image I’m going after and the meaning.”
In her
paintings Coffey employs her signature use of a centrally positioned foreground
figure, an icon who is pivotal to our interpretation of all other elements
portrayed. The face she illustrates for our scrutiny is most often her
own.
In “Self Portrait (cast),” Coffey’s face is transformed by virtue of
odd illumination into a guilefully leering mask. “My work is inspired by West
African figurative sculpture and masking tradition,” she says. “To make an image
of a human is in part to determine what it is to be human.”
Coffey says that
she is “inspired by the idea of the head as a metaphor...a signifier that can
express the way that we are psychological beings...beings of spiritual
aspirations, we are creatures of history and lineage, we have a collective
identity as a species, and we are animals. In each painting, I’m after the way
that I might fit into or be closer to one or other of those things.”
Coffey’s
exploration of facial expression and distortion is equal parts self-examination
and self-sacrifice. As any spiritualist might, Susanna Coffey becomes the
conduit. “I just let the work work on me. Whatever it wants, I’ll
do.”
Consequently, her powers of observation penetrate
many levels beyond the corporeal. Susanna Coffey’s recent paintings open a
window into the beauty of tragic times.
In the work “Conveyance,” Coffey
emerges, haggard and ghostly, from an atmospheric cloud of gray dust. The
figure’s expression illustrates the overwhelming weariness and despair of the
survivors of 9/11.
“My studio is very close to the World Trade Center in New
York, and I was there when it happened. I was very fortunate that I wasn’t
hurt.”
After the bombing Coffey did volunteer work, “like every other
Type-A New Yorker.” She served as a bicycle messenger, as well as a coordinator
for people who were looking for the remains of their loved ones.
“I was just
having the first-hand experience which I intellectually understand to be true of
many, many people of the world, that war is chaotic. You could stand on top of a
building and see the parts, the ruin... you could feel the death.” By being
unspecific about the location of the catastrophe, Coffey makes this a
universally pertinent image; an event that can happen anywhere in the world.
Ultimately the experience of living through 9/11
comes full circle when viewed through the eyes of a builder’s daughter. Susanna
remembers her father commenting about the erecting of the twin towers. “My dad
would talk about the ‘I’ beams... he watched them brought into the
city.
“Both of my parents were veterans of World War II.” Susanna’s
father “joined when he was too young. He became a lieutenant [and] was in both
theaters, in Asia and in Europe, and he was there on D-Day. My mother was a
combat nurse in a jungle hospital on the Burma Road, so she saw unspeakable
things. All the adults of my [parents’] generation, if they weren’t veterans,
they were holocaust survivors, or they were Asian people who’d been
incarcerated. They were people who were damaged by the war...there was really no
victory, and there’s not a sense that you ever win, or that there’s a
culmination or that it’s ever over...Everybody around me was traumatized by this
period in time. It was very formative to me.”
In the painting titled
“Self-portrait (Cassandra will),” Coffey seems to be presenting herself as a
modern version of Aeschylus’ Cassandra, the visionary whose prophecies were
cursed by Apollo to go unheeded. In the play Agamemnon, Cassandra, who has been
abducted from the ashes of her vanquished homeland, sees the Furies roosting on
the roof of her victorious captor’s home. She intuits images of the crime that
her captor Agamemnon has perpetrated. Cassandra sees that Agamemnon’s sacrifice
of his daughter Iphigenia will earn him a violent death. As when she cautioned
against allowing the Trojan horse into her city, Cassandra discerns that within
the arrogance of the powerful is harbored their defeat.
Coffey’s expressive face, as painted in
“Self-portrait (Cassandra will)” alludes to an unspecified and terrible
realization. As is often the case in Coffey’s recent paintings, her figure could
as easily be looking at us, her viewers, as she could be taking in a sight of
the Trojan horse or the roosting Furies.
Positioned in the painting as if
she were on a plane above the viewer she stares down in mute horror. If she is
reviewing the crimes of war, then her appalled face indicates that she considers
her viewer party to that conquest.
When Coffey made this painting, was
she pondering the loss of so many Iraqi and American lives? Was she as horrified
as Cassandra had been by the greed which motivates such an unprovoked and bloody
attack?
Having foreseen the folly of the war on Iraq, Coffey herself
“demonstrated and did all those things, but hardly anyone [else] did, and the
war just went on as if it were a video game and was going to be over in six
weeks, and it seemed clear that this wasn’t going to happen and that there would
be many, many repercussions.”
“In the beginning of the war I was collecting all
these images from the New York Times. I was just so disturbed by their beauty
and I was so appalled by the coverage of the war, which was so ass-kissing, so
really jingoistic. You knew how much suffering was going to happen on the part
of our soldiers and the Iraqi people, everyone in that part of the world and
everyone in this part of the world. War is like a pebble in a pond.”
In
another work, “Embedded,” Coffey points to the ways that militarism is
increasingly integral to our culture. Coffey portrays herself as a sexually
ambiguous figure whose skin meshes in an almost snake-like way within a pattern
of military camouflage. The subject’s hair is closely cropped and he/she stands
at attention. A dark stripe of shadow bisects the subject, seeming to partially
darken its vision.
By blurring these lines, Coffey forces upon the viewer
a number of questions. The painting’s emphasis on hidden uniformity parallel
America’s history of poorly hidden geopolitical agendas.
Coffey asserts
that there is a corrupting influence on all who participate, even passively, in
conquest. The image is perceivable as either militarized combatant or
militarized civilian in order to depict the concept. As she puts it, “there is a
culpability by presence and, regardless of one’s intentions, sometimes one is
culpable.”
Coffey’s sense of “culpability by presence” began
very early in life. “My mother was from Alabama and [we were] in a bus station
there and I’d just learned how to read—I was like five or something—and I saw a
fountain that said ‘colored,’ and of course colors are better than not colors
for a child. I ran towards the fountain, and then I remember people grabbing me
and pulling me back and I understood that something was wrong, that something
was very fucked up and that there was some kind of evil logic involved with the
words ‘white’ and ‘colored’ and these water fountains....”
Coffey asserts
that “politics are not impersonal, because that’s the place about which we all
have such strong feelings about how the world treats us. As artists wishing to
make work that is political, we must rely on our capacity to relate difficult
truths by employing the finest ‘building’ skills.
“Beauty is the thing
that allows us to wrap our minds around even the worst.”
F.H. Sellers Professor, Painting and Drawing, School of the Art Institute
of Chicago
BFA magna cum laude, 1976,
University of
Connecticut
MFA, 1982 Yale University
Recipient of The American
Academy of
Arts and Letters Award
John Simon Guggenheim
Memorial
Foundation Fellowship
Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation
Award
F Newsmagazine
September 2004