War Stories/Troubled Spaced
War Stories/Troubled Spaced
Based on interviews conducted in Nebraska City and Chicago, Mary King’s images capture personal experiences of war. In 2007, as an artist-in-residence at the Kimmel Harding Nelson, King interviewed interviewed persons eighty and older who remembered both World War II and World War I. King’s stylized images capture a story’s essence, often made memorable in a simple statement such as: “There were German subs.” or “He didn’t dwell on it.” In Chicago, she continued her series, interviewing a younger generation involved in the Iraq War. “My plan in all the work was to honor the feelings of not just soldiers but all affected by war.” says the artist. “I hope I have done these potent experiences justice.”
Nettie Locke Rogers’ Troubled Spaces sculptures are “miniature, surreal worlds that represent places and objects that have been thrown away, denied and forgotten. As I build a piece and carve the objects out of clay, I give respect to the things in life that are being disregarded.”