The Year of Magical Thinking: a novel by Joan Didion, 2021. Paper, vintage steel axe heads, Italian ruby spring twine.

The Year of Magical Thinking: a novel by Joan Didion, 2021. Paper, vintage steel axe heads, Italian ruby spring twine. Installation view.

The Year of Magical Thinking: a novel by Joan Didion, 2021. Paper, vintage steel axe heads, Italian ruby spring twine. Detail.

Stefana McClure, I See You Seeing Me (Meeting the Female Gaze). Installation view.

Stefana McClure, I See You Seeing Me (Meeting the Female Gaze). Installation view.

Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, translated and illustrated by Wanda Ga'g, 2014. woven paper, nylon mesh. 11h x 16w in.

Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, translated and illustrated by Wanda Ga'g, 2014. woven paper, nylon mesh. 11h x 16w in. Detail.

Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs, translated and illustrated by Wanda Ga'g, 2014. woven paper, nylon mesh. 11h x 16w in. Detail.

Wonder Woman: The Siege of the Flying Mermaids, 2015. Knitted paper. 9h x 6.50w in.

Wonder Woman: Flaming Fury, 2015. Knitted paper. 9h x 6.50w in.

"Welcome to The New World: The True Story of a Family’s Journey from Syria to America: Should We Stay or Should We Go?" by Jake Halpern & Michael Sloan, The New York Times. Knitted paper. Installation view. 

"Welcome to The New World: The True Story of a Family’s Journey from Syria to America: Should We Stay or Should We Go?" by Jake Halpern & Michael Sloan, The New York Times, March 4th, 2017, 2017. Knitted paper. 6.50h x 11.22w in.

 

"Welcome to The New World: The True Story of a Family’s Journey from Syria to America: They’re Safe in America. Now What?" by Jake Halpern & Michael Sloan, The New York Times, February 18th, 2017, 2017. Knitted paper. 6.38h x 10.67w in.

"Welcome to The New World: The True Story of a Family’s Journey from Syria to America: A Refugee Family’s First Days," by Jake Halpern & Michael Sloan, The New York Times, February 4th, 2017, 2017. Knitted paper. 17h x 28.50w cm.

"Welcome to The New World: The True Story of a Family’s Journey from Syria to America: Where Are All the Other Muslims?" by Jake Halpern & Michael Sloan, The New York Times, February 26th, 2017, 2017. Knitted paper.17h x 28.50w cm.

Stefana McClure, I See You Seeing Me (Meeting the Female Gaze). Installation view.

Protest stones, 2021. poetry-wrapped stones, twine, cord, rope, cut nail. 108h x 125w x 4d in. 

Protest stones, 2021. poetry-wrapped stones, twine, cord, rope, cut nail. 108h x 125w x 4d in. Detail.

Calling on All Silent Minorities: a poem by June Jordan, 2021. poetry-wrapped stones, polished Hungarian hemp cord, Irish linen twine, cut nail. 6h x 8w x 3d in.

What Kind of Times Are These: a poem by Adrienne Rich, 2021. poetry-wrapped stones, waxed twine, cut nail. 7h x 5w x 4d in.

Protest: a poem by Ella Wheeler Wilcox, 2021. poetry-wrapped stones, polished Hungarian hemp cord, Irish linen twine, cut nail. 6h x 6w x 4d in.

The Museum of Stones: a poem by Carolyn Forché, 2021. poetry-wrapped stones, polished Hungarian hemp cord, Irish linen twine, cut nail. 6h x 8w x 3d in.

The Wind-Up Doll: a poem by Forough Farrokhzad, 2021. poetry-wrapped stones, polished Hungarian hemp cord, Irish linen twine, cut nail. 6h x 7w x 4d in.

On The Fifth Day: a poem by Jane Hirshfield, 2021. poetry-wrapped stones, Irish linen twine, Italian ruby spring twine, cut nail. 6h x 5w x 4d in.

I Pity the garden: a poem by Forough Farrokhzad, 2021. poetry-wrapped stones, polished Hungarian hemp cord, Italian ruby spring twine, cut nail. 6h x 8w x 3d in.

Riot: a poem by Gwendolyn Brooks, 2020. poetry-wrapped stones, Irish linen twine, cut nail. 6h x 7w x 4d in.

Ars Poetica #1,002: Rally: a poem by Elizabeth Alexander, 2021. poetry-wrapped stones, Irish linen twine, Italian ruby spring twine, cut nail. 6h x 5w x 3d in.

Ars Poetica #1,002: Rally: a poem by Elizabeth Alexander, 2021. poetry-wrapped stones, Irish linen twine, Italian ruby spring twine, cut nail. 6h x 5w x 3d in. Detail.

Tokyo Story: English subtitles to a film by Yasujiro Ozu, 2015. Wax transfer paper, mounted on dibond. 39.75h x 60.75w in.

Stefana McClure, I See You Seeing Me (Meeting the Female Gaze). Installation view.

Late Spring: English subtitles to a film by Yasujiro Ozu, 2010. Wax Transfer paper, mounted on Dibond. 23.50h x 29.75w in.

 

Stefana McClure, Early Summer- English subtitles to a film by Yasujiro Ozu, 2010. Wax Transfer paper, mounted on Dibond. 23.50h x 29.75w in.

Stefana McClure, I See You Seeing Me (Meeting the Female Gaze). Installation view.

Stefana McClure, The Five Elephants: five novels by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, 2018-2020. cut paper. Installation view.

Stefana McClure, A Raw Youth: a novel by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, 2019-2020. cut paper. 25 inches circumfrence.

Stefana McClure, The Brothers Karamazov: a novel by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, 2019. cut paper. 17.5 inches circumfrence.

Stefana McClure. Crime and Punishment: a novel by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, 2018. Cut paper. 20 inches circumference.

Stefana McClure. Crime and Punishment: a novel by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, 2018. Cut paper. 20 inches circumference. Detail.

Stefana McClure, The Idiot: a novel by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, 2019. cut paper. 17 inches circumference.

Stefana McClure, The Possessed: a novel by Fyodor Dostoyevsky, 2018-2019. cut paper. 19.5 inches circumference.

Stefana McClure, I See You Seeing Me (Meeting the Female Gaze). Installation view.

Stefana McClure, I see you seeing me, 2021. Cut paper, invisible hair net. 9h x 3w x 1d in.

Stefana McClure The brain is wider then the sky, 2021. Cut paper, invisible hair net. 10h x 5w x 1d in.

Stefana McClure, knitting is the saving of life, 2021. Cut paper, invisible hair net. 6h x 5w x 1d in.

Stefana McClure, words belong to each other, 2021. Cut paper, invisible hair net. 8h x 4w x 1d in.

Stefana McClure, I dwell in possibility, 2021. Cut paper, invisible hair net. 9h x 5w x 1d in.

Stefana McClure, I See You Seeing Me (Meeting the Female Gaze). Installation view.

Stefana McClure, The Odyssey by Homer, translated by Emily Wilson, 2021. Cut paper, wooden shelf. 7h x 10w in. (ball: 18.5 in. circumference).

Stefana McClure, Wonder Woman: Japanese subtitles to a film by Patti Jenkins, 2018. Transfer paper mounted on rag. 7.50h x 9.50w in.

Stefana McClure, I See You Seeing Me (Meeting the Female Gaze). Installation view.

Stefana McClure, Coal from Tender Buttons by Gertrude Stein, 2021. Cut paper, anthracite, wooden shelf. 6.50h x 18w x 1.50d in.

Stefana McClure, Gaslight: closed captions to a film by George Cukor, 2019. Graphite transfer paper mounted on rag. 19h x 27.50w in.

I See You Seeing Me (Meeting the Female Gaze)

November 4 – December 22, 2021

Bienvenu Steinberg & Partner is pleased to present I See You Seeing Me (Meeting the Female Gaze), Stefana McClure’s 8th solo exhibition in New York. The exhibition will be on view from November 4 through December 22, 2021. Translating, transposing and decoding the synesthetic structure connecting text and image, McClure unveils the layers of embedded information to which we are constantly subjected and brings to light the complexities and the aftermath of violence on societies.  

The women we now see looking back at the world are women we can identify with and believe in: strong, independent, non-fetishized. I See You Seeing Me meets this gaze, celebrating films, poetry, novels and comics made from a female vantage point and embracing a feminist sensibility. Upon entering the space, one is confronted with a mighty double-string necklace strung with Italian ruby spring twine. It is made of ten vintage steel axe heads, wrapped with the poetic prose of Joan Didion’s The Year of Magical Thinking. As Franz Kafka famously said “A book must be the axe for the frozen sea within us”. 

Five sculptures on a table are the centerpiece of the gallery. Deconstructed books reconfigured as continuous balls of string, the paper sculptures are shown here for the first time, a massive undertaking McClure has been working on since 2018. The sculptures are complete reconstructions of Fyodor Dostoyevsky’s five major novels, The Idiot, The Brothers Karamazov, Crime and Punishment, The Possessed, and A Raw Youth. These behemoths are collectively known as The Five Elephants, a phrase coined by Svetlana Geier, perhaps the world’s greatest translator of Russian literature, who spent her life retranslating these texts into German, offering a new reading of the masterpieces.  

Much of McClure’s practice involves using processes more often applied to textiles than paper. She has created a series of finely woven objects reminiscent of wall tapestries. Wonder Woman, one of the most powerful superheroes in the DC universe, battles an evil group of mermaids created from tiny sharks. The comics, cut into strips and hand knit back together, are transfigured into a delicate fabric, weaving alternate storylines that are barely perceptible.

Also on view is a discreet installation of invisible hair net sculptures inspired by the admonition to carry one’s knowledge lightly. The ultimate in self-effacement: “you are the only one who knows you are wearing it,” these text depositories, magic knit of sheer nylon yarn and woven into a self-conforming and durable ultra-invisible mesh, enable the wearer to bear their learning quietly on their head. 

Emily Wilson’s fabulous translation of The Odyssey — the first English translation of the epic poem by a woman, has been deconstructed and reconfigured into a ball of cut paper as well. It stands as a single sculpture, a complete world unto itself. Coal from Tender Buttons by Gertrude Stein is placed on a single shelf reminiscent of a Ryoan-ji rock garden. Taken from Gertrude Stein’s enigmatic collection of experimental poems describing everyday objects, it consists of chunks of anthracite, a hard, compact coal with a submetallic luster, word-wrapped and polished.

 

An installation of Protest Stones occupies the wall. These hurling weapons hang with braided twine. Made of either two, or three poetry-wrapped stones, the sculptures are nestled in knotted and tied Irish linen twine, or polished Hungarian hemp cord. Reminiscent of gaucho bolas or Arctic yo-yos, the stones are bolstered by the weighty words of iconic poets Ella Wheeler Wilcox, Joan Jordan, Adrienne Rich, Audre Lorde, Eavan Boland and Forough Farrokhzad. 

A selection of Films on Paper punctuate the show. A body of work McClure has been developing over the past twenty years, the  drawings are  minimal compositions of two blurred lines at the bottom of a monochromatic field. McClure traces scene after scene of spoken dialogue, removing pigment from the paper with each transcription, ultimately condensing the entire text so that it can be viewed at once. The female gaze is central to Yasujiro Ozu’s Noriko Trilogy (Late Spring, Early Summer, Tokyo Story), named for the female protagonist of all three films played by the inimitable Setsuko Hara. Ingrid Bergman is the abused wife manipulated by a diabolical husband to paranoid extremes of self-doubt and anxiety in George Cukor’s 1944 film Gaslight. Patty Jenkins’ film celebration of Wonder Woman is presented in DVD form with Japanese subtitles. Films made from a female standpoint, (as measured by the Bechdel test), are remarkable by their scarcity — despite the recent history of the art form, the representation of women in fiction film is still extremely confined to assigned roles.

 

Born in Lisburn, Northern Ireland, Stefana McClure lives and works in New York. She has exhibited extensively at museums and galleries internationally. Recent exhibitions include: The Immigrant Artist Biennial, New York (2020), Carlow Arts Festival, Carlow, Ireland (2020); The Bronx Museum of the Arts, New York (2019); CENTRALE for Contemporary Art, Brussels BE (2018); Kunst Palais Liechtenstein, Feldkirch, Austria (2017) and Dublin Contemporary Biennial, IE (2011). Select collections include: The Museum of Modern Art, New York; The Museum of Fine Arts Houston, TX; Yale University Art Gallery, New Haven, CT; Fogg Art Museum, Harvard University Art Museums, Cambridge, MA; Staatsgalerie, Stuttgart, DE; Kunstmuseum Bonn, DE and The Machida City International Print Museum, Tokyo, JP.