Nov/Dec
2015
Naoe
Suzuki’s Thirst For Awareness
by
Taryn Plumb
Especially
in first-world countries, water is a resource that’s very often
taken for granted – it comes out of the tap, streams out of the
shower, is poured into plastic bottles and driven in by the
pallet-full on the back of diesel- belching trucks.
In
her latest body of work, Tokyo-born artist Naoe Suzuki strives for
viewers to reassess and deeply contemplate their relationship with
water – in all its forms. Her works – rendered on equally fragile
paper – incorporate tracings of various water bodies alongside
symbolic cutouts and whimsical collage.
“Most
of us never think about it, because water is always here,” said the
Waltham-based artist, who came to the states more than 30 years ago
as an exchange student. Quoting the Emily Dickinson poem, “Water,
is Taught by Thirst,” she stressed that there is no such thing as
“always,” and that water is not free or in the condition that
some of us assume it to be. “We only think of things after they’re
gone,” she said.
Suzuki’s
ruminations on the status of water will be displayed in the exhibit,
“In Solidarity” through November 25 at UMass Lowell’s
University Gallery. The show features 17 pieces, both paper works and
installations, focusing on the themes of water supply and scarcity,
contamination and pollution.
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