Acrylic nails get the fine art treatment

The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Tuesday, April 30, 2024


Acrylic nails get the fine art treatment
“A Fountain for Survivors,” a 18-foot fountain embellished with more than 350,000 acrylic nails in Times Square in New York on Oct. 14, 2021. Council, an artist whose works are steeped in Black American culture, created an 18-foot fountain embellished with more than 350,000 acrylic nails, on display in Times Square until Dec. 8. Sunny Shokrae/The New York Times.

by Sandra E. Garcia



NEW YORK, NY.- For most New Yorkers, most of the time, Times Square is a challenge. Walking through the crowds of tourists, vendors, break dancing crews, and multiple Elmos and Iron Mans can be daunting when you’re just trying to make it to work.

But it’s also disturbing to see the area nearly cleared out, as it was last year during the pandemic. As pedestrians slowly begin to fill the area again, a monument has been erected for those who have been there through it all.

“A Fountain for Survivors,” created by Pamela Council, an artist whose works are steeped in Black American culture, is an 18-foot fountain embellished with more than 350,000 acrylic nails, on display in Times Square until Dec. 8.

The hundreds of thousands of acrylic nails used for the structure vary in size, from tiny toenail length to rectangular talon. Some are painted pale pink with a white tip. Some are magenta, gold and yellow. Others are bedazzled with rhinestones and crystals. A few feature hand-painted designs by local nail artists.

Many are fanned out across the carapace of the fountain, which forms a curvy, bulbous shape around it, resembling a 3D rendering of an organ from an anatomy book. Pink and magenta clouds are painted on the inside of the structure, and the ceiling is tufted with a silk fabric, a gold light fixture holding it together in the middle.

The fountain in the middle of it all contains 100 gallons of water, which trickle down three levels into a large fuchsia cauldronlike dish.

As one walks into the art piece, the loud music from dance crews, the murmur of the crowd and the bright lights of the billboards seem to fade away. In the middle of the chaos of Times Square, the space is serene and dreamy, the sound of water calming the senses.

“The fingernails become this sort of armor and this protective style layer, in between the buzzing Times Square public and people who are visiting this intimate space,” said Council, who uses they/them pronouns, in a recent interview.

The nails also symbolize self-expression and the small acts of personal upkeep that many people rely on — or ritualize — in order to persevere on a daily basis.

“We build monuments to winning wars and tragedies, but I need a monument to maintaining,” Council said. “For some people that is monumental.”

Before the pandemic, more than 300,000 people walked through Times Square on any given day, according to the Times Square District Management Association. But last year, the pedestrian count plummeted to fewer than 50,000 people per day.

“There are fewer people moving throughout Times Square, but the people who are, are working people, they’re the people that keep things running, they are the essential workers that we have been talking about for the last year and a half,” Council said.

Now, with 64% of New Yorkers fully vaccinated, the city is rebounding. In September, there were nearly 219,000 people back in Times Square. The fountain was unveiled last week in Duffy Square, a small plaza in the northernmost triangle of Times Square.

“Survival felt like a very universally urgent notion that people from all walks of life and experiences could identify with in this moment,” said Jean Cooney, the director of Times Square Arts, the public art arm of the Times Square Alliance and the organization that commissioned the work, “whether that idea around survival was for them related to the pandemic or something more personal.”

It was Council’s lens on survival, which is punctuated by joy and gloomy humor, that Cooney felt could bring a much-needed levity to the area.




On a recent weekend, Michael Vanfossen, 40, and his wife stopped by to check out the fountain. “We thought it was an Easter egg,” Vanfossen said. “But up close it is impressive because it looks like the inside of an ear.”

He added: “My wife said it looked like a uterus or a fallopian tube. And it looks feminine and with all the nails, it makes sense.”

Clovice Holt, 30, another onlooker (and a fellow artist), said: “It’s 100% Black and 100% woman.” He added: “It’s Black, it’s New York, it’s exactly what we needed.”

According to a New York City Comptroller’s report from March 2020, 75% of all frontline workers at the beginning of the pandemic were people of color. More than 60% were women. That reality contributed to higher rates of mortality from COVID-19 among people of color, and worsened already persistent economic inequalities.

Valerie Wilson, the director of the Economic Policy Institute’s Program on Race, Ethnicity, and the Economy, remarked on the pandemic’s disproportionate toll on Black and brown communities in the city: “I think that we are at a time now where there seems to be some greater acknowledgment of the traumas that are created by racism and racial inequality,” Wilson said. “That is important to counteracting the idea that Black people are simply being resilient. You do what you have to do but what is the cost?”

Council’s fountain is an offering to those survivors and to all survivors, more generally. “With fountains, you can make these offerings and dedications on a civic scale,” they said.

Council has worked with acrylic nails before. In 2012, the artist created a sculpture called “Flo Jo World Record Nails” that used 2,000 acrylic fingernails to shape a replica of a track course in honor of the 200-meter course where track and field athlete Florence Griffith Joyner made history.

Council used the same materials for “A Fountain for Survivors,” but this time the artist is celebrating not an individual achievement, but offering a moment of respite to anyone within the city.

“Their fountain is something really different and completely unexpected. At the same time, they’re using these materials that you’ve definitely seen before,” Cooney said of Council. “We all understand acrylic nails, but I’ve never seen 400,000 of them in beautiful and vibrant mosaics. It’s a little bit of something incredibly accessible and familiar, but turned into something completely spectacular and unexpected.”

Council’s choice of nails fits within a broader exploration in their artistic works into the juxtaposition between the flashy style of Black beauty and “people wanting to see the reproduction of Black death,” they said.

“People love the adornment and culture of Blackness more than they love us,” they added.

Council uses the term “Blaxidermy” — a combination of the term Blaxploitation and taxidermy — as a label for the art they produce in this vein. (In 2008, Council started a Tumblr account with the same name.)

In 2018, for example, the artist created “Red Drink: A BLAXIDERMY Juneteenth Offering,” a concrete fountain shaped like a palm tree, with a wide base that held 800 gallons of Big Red soda that was meant to represent sugar, but also human blood. In 2019, they created “BLAXIDERMY Pink,” an installation that included chocolate fondue fountains bubbling over with Lusters Pink Lotion.

The Times Square fountain is its own social commentary but it doubles as a gift. Not for the tourists who walk through Times Square and see the fountain — though Council appreciates them — but for New Yorkers.

“There’s just a difference between visiting New York and being a New Yorker,” Council said. “You got to be in it.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

October 28, 2021

McNay Art Museum opens the largest survey of Wayne Thiebaud's work in 20 years

Cheim & Read opens an exhibition of paintings by Milton Resnick

Russia reopens the last czar's palace, a century after his execution

Palace of Versailles hosts the exhibition "The King's Animals"

Hindman Auctions to Present Fine Books & Manuscripts, Including Americana & Selections from the Studio of Barry Moser

Christie's announces The Nile Rodgers Collection sold to benefit The We Are Family Foundation

Freeman's white-glove sale of Alexander Hamilton material delights collectors of American history

Rare Renoir leads Bonhams Impressionist & Modern Art sale in New York

Perrotin opens an exhibition of works by Barry McGee

Pop Larkin's beloved yellow Rolls-Royce from ITV series 'Darling Buds of May' for sale with H&H Classics

Acrylic nails get the fine art treatment

Lalanne, Bertoia, and Warhol head up powerful array of works at Freeman's November auction

Kurt Kauper now represented by Miles McEnery Gallery

Photo book follows NYC girls' 30 years of friendship

Martha Henry, a leading stage actress in Canada, dies at 83

James Cohan opens the first US gallery exhibition of work by multimedia artist Emeka Ogboh

The Schick Art Gallery pens an exhibition of works by four sculptors who also create drawings and digital prints

Russia to probe Dutch decision on Crimean gold

20th Century French, Italian and Scandinavian design lead Phillips' London auction

The MFAH announces appointment of Anita Bateman as Associate Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art

Prestwick Collection of Carson City rarities among top draws in Heritage Auctions' U.S. Coins event

David DePatie, producer behind the Pink Panther, dies at 91

How to Promote a Brand Using the Power of Your Personality

Did Casino Stakes Really Increase When Considering Inflation?

Why Slack is an Effective Culture-Builder

Using Art Therapy for Treating Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez

sa gaming free credit
Attorneys
Truck Accident Attorneys
Accident Attorneys

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site Parroquia Natividad del Señor
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful