Ellen Lesperance and Diane Simpson
September 21, 2019–January 5, 2020
704 Terry Avenue
Seattle, Washington 98104
USA
Hours: Wednesday–Sunday 11am–5pm
info@fryemuseum.org
The Frye Art Museum presents Dress Codes, an exhibition that brings the work of contemporary artists Ellen Lesperance and Diane Simpson into conversation for the first time. Comprising works on paper, sculptural objects, and knitted garments, the exhibition highlights the artists’ body- and design-adjacent use of the grid as a feminist alternative to patriarchal representational traditions of painting and sculpture.
Clothing is both a highly personal and a socially constructed system of communication: a signifying point of contact between individual identities and collective attitudes, customs, and trends. Ellen Lesperance and Diane Simpson perform acts of translation in relation to clothing’s form and ornamentation, pressing images of historical garments—and the values encoded within them—through the interpretive interface of the grid. Though they begin from different types of source material and seek divergent ends, these artists both employ gridded formats associated with the applied arts and domestic crafts as a means of transformation across time and dimension.
Ellen Lesperance creates gouache paintings based on the attire of women activists, warriors, and cultural figures rendered in the universal shorthand of knitting patterns. Dress Codes surveys her work in this vein from 2011 to the present, including pieces inspired by depictions of Amazons found on ancient Greek redware pottery, images of contemporary feminist artists and writers, and documentation of protest movements. She frequently references the Greenham Common Women’s Peace Camp in Berkshire, United Kingdom, where, from 1981 to 2000, an ever-changing community of women, often clad in handmade sweaters adorned with feminist and pacifist emblems, mounted antinuclear-weapons demonstrations. Lesperance’s paintings move between the artistic and activist realms, functioning as stand-alone artworks and as directions for knitting the pictured garments, as the artist herself has sometimes done. They also serve as homage to the original wearers, a record of their ideological symbology, and stimulus to like-minded action in the present.
Spanning forty years, Diane Simpson’s sculptural work begins with illustrations from antique clothing catalogues, window dressing manuals, and histories of dress, homing in particularly on aspects of attire associated with domestic work, adornment, or propriety. Her plan drawings—modeled on axonometric projection, or parallel perspective, an architectural tool that integrates multiple viewpoints into a single image—present forms such as collars, cuffs, aprons, and bonnets in a foreshortened perspective that she often maintains when constructing three-dimensional versions. The resulting angular distortions, coupled with dramatic shifts in scale and materiality, both estrange and magnify the garments’ relationship to the body, underscoring their sociological significance as imposed expressions of gender norms, class status, and morality.
Ellen Lesperance (American, b. 1971, Minneapolis, Minnesota) lives and works in Portland, Oregon. Her work has been exhibited nationally at the Brooklyn Museum, New York; New Museum, New York; the Portland Art Museum, Oregon; The Drawing Center, New York; and Seattle Art Museum. She has also shown internationally at the Bonniers Konsthall, Stockholm, and the Tate St Ives, Cornwall, England.
Diane Simpson (American, b. 1935, Joliet, Illinois) lives and works in Chicago. Recent one- and two-person exhibitions of her work have been held at Herald St, London; Corbett vs. Dempsey, Chicago; JTT, New York; Broadway Windows, New York University; Silberkuppe, Berlin; Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; and Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. She has exhibited in numerous group shows, including the 2019 Whitney Biennial.
Dress Codes: Ellen Lesperance and Diane Simpson is organized by the Frye Art Museum and curated by Amanda Donnan. Generous support for this exhibition is provided by ArtsFund50. Media sponsorship provided by Crosscut.
Also on view:
Pierre Leguillon: Arbus Bonus
September 21, 2019–January 5, 2020
Unsettling Femininity: Selections from the Frye Art Museum Collection
September 21, 2019–August 23, 2020