Carole Kunstadt At Rice Polak Gallery

It’s that time of year when I have the true honor of introducing Rice Polak Gallery’s newest artists starting with Carole Kunstadt. Carole’s works reference artifacts, antique manuscripts and books, deconstructing paper and text and using it in metaphorical ways. Through the manipulation of these antique materials, history, memory and time merge in a hybrid form – revealing how language can become visual through re-interpretation, often invoking a metaphysical quality of contemplation and timelessness.

Carole Kunstadt
PRESSING ON No. 119
Carole Kunstadt Pressing On No. 13
PRESSING ON No. 13
Carole’s series entitled “PRESSING ON” reads like a meditation on how domestic labor—so often invisible, feminized, and undervalued—can be transformed into a site of strength, memory, and resistance. Texture defies the irons and instead function as muscle-powered clothing-pressers the hardness of iron, the softness of fibers, and the wisdom of words, all are a testament to the labor of generations of women.

Utilizing text from writings by pro-feminist, abolitionist, writer Hannah More, published in 1791 – More’s life-long overriding cause was galvanizing women to act not as domestic ornaments, but as thinking, engaged and responsible beings. Hannah gave the abolitionist movement a public voice with her writings.

Kunstadt_OVUM XII - vintage wire egg basket and hand blown glass nesting eggs, pearls, monofilament, Swarovski 25 x 20 x 20in, 2018
OVUM XII (Aphrodite’s Purse)
Kundstadt
OVUM XIX & OVUM XX

The Ovum Series consistently utilizes the egg form as a metaphor for Margaret Fuller’s ideas, as it symbolizes fertility, hope, perseverance and possibility. Sarah Margaret Fuller Ossoli was an educator, social reformer, transcendentalist, critic, abolitionist, the first American female foreign correspondent and woman’s rights advocate.

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