Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Taking a break from my assignments because I went on a feminist rampage.


 "You Are Not Yourself"
Barbara Kruger



Sometimes I get terrified of the thought that I may have to raise a daughter in this world. If that happens, I’m going to do my best, but lately I’ve been so highly sensitive to and aware of the role that women are now playing in modern America. We live in a society right now where simple, refined femininity is no longer enough. Every popular female music artist today conveys to women that in order to be appealing, you either have to be explicitly sexual (Beyonce, Katy Perry, Rihanna) or a huge freak – extremely brash, masculine, weird and edgy and covered in chains, leather, and glitter (Lady Gaga, Ke$ha, Britney Spears). It’s okay for women to use harsh, foul language. It’s okay to dress like a whore. It’s okay to fill your body with artificial chemicals and implants. It’s okay to get so drunk and sloppy to the point that you forget entire weekends of your life. Basically, if girls want to discover self worth or have a worthwhile life, it’s going to have to come out of their sexual appeal or their shock value. Because who you really are will never be enough. Simply being a woman is not enough.


What I think is especially ironic is that this mentality is supposed to paint a portrait of strength and independence for women. Respect is the last thing that these kind of women have earned. Money, men, and fame, maybe, but not respect and certainly not strength. And it makes me sad for future generations. We’re setting bright, innocent girls up for failure by coaxing them into becoming slipshod women.

To me, a strong woman is a woman who realizes that confidence and respect come from her mind and her exceptional capacity to influence the world and those around her. A strong woman is a woman who sacrifices her needs on behalf of her children. A strong woman is a woman who goes after her ambitions of being a businesswoman, an architect, a historian, an engineer, or an artist. A strong woman is a woman who facilitates happiness, hope, and love. Sister Margaret D. Nadauld said, “The world has enough women who are tough; we need women who are tender. There are enough women who are coarse; we need women who are kind. There are enough women who are rude; we need women who are refined. We have enough women of fame and fortune; we need more women of faith. We have enough greed; we need more goodness. We have enough vanity; we need more virtue. We have enough popularity; we need more purity.”

Another reason I’ve been on this rampage lately is because of the fact that the LDS religion has been in the public eye a little more lately with Mitt Romney and Jon Huntsman in their presidential campaigns, as well as popularity of The Book of Mormon musical, and many comments I’ve read online and heard from friends have been about the oppression that LDS Church puts on women. If I wasn’t a member of the church myself, I might get that impression. However, I believe that this is simply a misinformed outside impression that few women in the church actually feel. In fact, I’m not entirely sure from where this impression comes (interesting fact: Utah was the actually first state that tried to grant women the right to vote. However, statehood was quickly denied by the U.S. government because basically the United States thought that the Mormons trying to settle it were going to take over politics, force everyone to convert and consequently brainwash everyone into polygamy and then put everyone in a rocket-ship and blast them into space in hopes of making it to heaven while leaving all the Democrats, gays, and atheists in a giant hole we dug under the Great Salt Lake...
that last part was a joke, by the way).

As a member of the LDS Church for the past 14 years, I have always been encouraged to attain higher education, I have never felt or been told that I’m mentally and certainly not spiritually inferior to men in the Church (those in authority or otherwise), and I understand that the spirit of a woman is something entirely unique to that of a man and that I hold equal but distinctive responsibilities. To those still in doubt, ask the question—what did Christ think of women? I always find it interesting that one of the first stories we read in the Bible of Christ’s ministry is not about loudly preaching to thousands of Jews—it’s of the simple encounter with a woman at a well. What did Christ think of his mother? What of Mary and Martha? What of the woman taken in adultery?

“Of all the creations of the Almighty, there is none more beautiful, none more inspiring than a lovely daughter of God who walks in virtue with an understanding of why she should do so, who honors and respects her body as a thing sacred and divine, who cultivates her mind and constantly enlarges the horizon of her understanding, who nurtures her spirit with everlasting truth.”
President Gordon B. Hinckley

So I guess I'm not really terrified to have a daughter. I just hope that I can teach her what's really important so that she's able to make it through and understand where her self worth really comes from. In the words of President James E. Faust, “I wonder if you sisters fully understand the greatness of your gifts and talents and how all of you can achieve the 'highest place of honor' in the Church and in the world. One of your unique, precious, and sublime gifts is your femininity, with its natural grace, goodness, and divinity. Femininity is not just lipstick, stylish hairdos, and trendy clothes. It is the divine adornment of humanity. It finds expression in your qualities of your capacity to love, your spirituality, delicacy, radiance, sensitivity, creativity, charm, graciousness, gentleness, dignity, and quiet strength. It is manifest differently in each girl or woman, but each of you possesses it. Femininity is part of your inner beauty…It is your incomparable power and influence to do good.”



Monday, June 6, 2011

Assignment #2

Give Advice To Yourself in the Past  
 Choose a particular age you have been, perhaps a time when you were particularly lost. Write out a list of practical advice to yourself at that age. Begin the list with this header: "Advice To Michelle Cambell at Sixteen" (only use your name and whatever age you want.) You must specify the age that you are giving yourself advice to! Be very specific with your advice, for example, don't just say "Hold on to your heart," but instead say "Don't go out with Kevin, he will eventually cheat on you. Go out with Jake instead, he is actually cooler." If you need to use fake names go ahead. It is easy to say that everything happens for a reason, but take this opportunity to redirect yourself towards what you think might have been better. Sure everything turned out ok, but maybe you should have quit that job five years earlier, maybe you should have had children when you were 27, maybe you should have flossed, maybe you should have gone to the alternative high school, or not said that thing to your best friend. Tell yourself what to do in clear, specific language. Do not write an essay, make it in list form.


Advice to Bethany Jane Lott at Age Ten:


1. Take more art classes in high school, not choir.


2. Hold Cooper in the hospital after he’s born. 


3. Don’t worry about going to middle school dances if you don’t want to. They’re not that cool.


4. Keep playing the cello even after you stop taking lessons.  


5. Hold Will’s hand on prom night.


6. When you learn how to drive, be especially careful on the corner of 200 East and Highway 25.


7. Make sure to take dual-credit Calculus your senior year.


8. When you try out for The Crucible in high school and Mr. Brown asks you if you want a bigger role or a smaller one, don’t say smaller.


9. Don’t kiss your best friend and also don’t kiss anyone you don’t know very well, unless you are in London.


10. Pay more attention in your Spanish classes.
 

11. Move out of Sparks II in August. Don’t wait until January.


12. Be a better friend to Amber, Stephanie, and Alison in high school.


13. When you join Advanced Speech in high school, don’t do Expository Speaking. You’re better at Oratorical Analysis. 

14. Start running.

15. Make more memories with your grandparents.



Thursday, May 19, 2011

Assignment #1


Make a list of 100 things that you like
Make a list of 100 things you like in no particular order. Avoid the obvious (significant other, cake...) and be completely honest with yourself. If you try to think of things that you are curious about and inspired by, you'll end up discovering a lot about yourself and in doing so developing a sort of bank of your interests and ideas.


1. Electrical tape
2. Pearls
3. Domestic cats
4. Harry Potter
5. Hyacinths
6. Oil pastels
7. Ancient Chinese ritual vessels
8. London, England
9. Fred Tomaselli
10. Weird Mormon culture
11. Getting my teeth cleaned
12. Steinway pianos
13. Idaho
14. Caravaggio
15. Crop dusters
16. The smell of Tide detergent
17. Awkward moments
18. Meryl Streep
19. Virtually all baby mammals
20. Natural light
21. Les Miserables
22. Cellos
23. Lightning
24. Being alone
25. Lilacs
26. Nineteenth-century French Realism
27. Red accent walls in kitchens
28. Television programs about the paranormal
29. Shakespeare
30. Kohl’s
31. Three-piece suits
32. Qawwali
33. Andy Goldsworthy
34. My signature
35. Southern accents
36. Sand dunes
37. The MoMA in NYC
38. Old jars and bottles
39. Wheat fields
40. Mascara
41. Longboards
42. Acoustic guitars
43. The first day of spring
44. LDS Church history
45. Moving walkways in airports
46. Hoodies
47. Yellowstone National Park
48. BYU
49. The Spanish language
50. Broadway musicals
51. Pedicures
52. Quotes by Neal A. Maxwell
53. St. George, Utah
54. Collecting seashells
55. Opals
56. Old milk cans
57. Chick-fil-A chicken nuggets
58. Gossip Girl
59. Compliments from strangers
60. Justin Bieber
61. Running the tips of my fingers very lightly across my forehead and eyelashes
62. Stupid YouTube videos
63. The first line of “Good Life” by OneRepublic
64. General Conference weekend
65. Always being able to blame my sometimes uncontrollable emotions on hormones
66. Bachata
67. Going to church
68. Making art out of the food leftover on my plate at restaurants
69. The Fourth of July
70. Post-Apocalyptic movies
71. Welding
72. People who look like celebrities
73. Men crying
74. Looking online at engagement rings for no reason
75. The color of my hair
76. Fog
77. Latinos
78. Sleeping in new places
79. The final scene of “Finding Neverland”
80. Brand-new returned missionaries
81. Every time my mother quotes literature or poetry
82. People who can whistle really well
83. First-time dads in hospitals
84. The Santa Monica Pier
85. People who I can be silent with and not have it feel uncomfortable
86. Defending my religious beliefs
87. Painting stuff that’s not really supposed to be painted
88. Bottles of Coca-Cola
89. Going the speed limit in order to annoy aggressive drivers
90. Painting with coffee
91. Horchata
92. Quoting “Dumb and Dumber”
93. Cheerios
94. The friends from high school who still actually inspire me
95. When people admit that they’re wrong
96. Hot tubs
97. Band t-shirts
98. Astronomy
99. Monarch butterflies
100. Idaho sunsets

My Summer Plans: Learning to Love You More

The best art and writing is almost like an assignment; it is so vibrant that you feel compelled to make something in response. Suddenly it is clear what you have to do. For a brief moment it seems wonderfully easy to live and love and create breathtaking things. In a sense, these are assignments - in the same way that the ocean gives the assignment of breathing deeply, and kissing instructs us to stop thinking.

I was introduced to learningtoloveyoumore.com about a year ago. Created by artists Miranda July and Harrell Fletcher, this website is comprised of work made by the general public in response to specific assignments. Participants accepted an assignment, completed it by following the simple but specific instructions, sent in the required report (photograph, text, video, etc), and then their work was posted on-line. "Like a recipe, meditation practice, or familiar song, the prescriptive nature of these assignments was intended to guide people towards their own experience." The project lasted from 2002 to 2009 with over 8,000 participants. The results were not only posted on the website, but featured in exhibitions in museums (The Whitney in NYC, to name one), galleries, schools, senior citizens centers, radio shows and film festivals.

While this project has been expired for nearly three years, I have been compelled to begin my own LTLYM blog / experience. I've chosen about 30 of the assignments posted on learningtoloveyoumore.com (I've opted not to do every single assignment due to a lack of resources...or I just didn't feel like doing some of them) and will be completing them over the next few months. Anyone is welcome to join me in completing and reporting on any and all assignments!  


Also, since I abandoned my first attempt at a personal blog, I intend to use this as my artist website once I've completed all the assignments. The title of my site comes from a quote by Andy Warhol:

An artist is somebody who produces things that people don't need to have.

The further and further I get into my practice as an artist and as a future art educator, the more I understand why I chose this. The purpose of art - something that took me years of searching - is to allow us to take part in what I believe is a fundamental longing implanted into human nature and that is the desire to create. It's not something that vital to our survival, but like water and air, provides sustenance to the unnecessary in life - the desire to love, to hope, to change, to grow.

Usually when I tell people that I'm studying art, the first thing they ask is, "So do you like to draw and stuff?" The first part of that question is easy to answer. Do I like to draw? Sure. It's the "and stuff" part that is so much more important. Unfortunately it would take a lifetime to explain to someone my reasons for engaging in the art world, what it means to me, and who I am becoming because of it. But hopefully I can start explaining here.