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Williams College Museum of Art Presents
Emily
Driscoll: Works
May
31–July 13, 2008
Williamstown, Mass.—The Williams College Museum of Art
(WCMA) presents the work of Emily Driscoll, Williams Graduate
Class of 2005. The exhibition features a broad range of works
on paper, the principal medium in which the artist worked. Driscoll's
works are meticulously rendered in wax, pen, ink, and marker.
Many depict figures in a dream-like world, where the inhabitants
have curious attachments, additions of apparatus or extra limbs,
and are in the act of either putting on or removing the items
as if they were accessories and clothing. The figures, in their
curious garb, seem to be simultaneously connected to and bound
to others in a collective drama that comments on the human condition.
Driscoll’s
work will be shown in the museum’s historic rotunda, beginning May 31,
2008.
In many ways, Driscoll's work references the physical and emotional "baggage" that
people carry with them. "My work is as much about self-fashioning as it
is about relative identities," wrote the artist. In 2007, Cate McQuaid,
the arts writer for the Boston Globe, wrote, "There is a sense [in the drawings]
that nothing is authentic here; there is no "real" self, only the social
construction of one. It's dark work, expertly made."
Driscoll’s work has been shown in Voice: A National Exhibition of Work
by Women in Contemporary Art, an exhibition juried by Kara Walker at the
Providence Art Club. She was awarded a solo show at the Bromfield Gallery in
Boston, Mass. in January 2007. This exhibition, entitled "Attachment," was
curated b Nick Capasso, the curator of the DeCordova Museum and Sculpture Park.
In addition, Driscoll has had exhibitions at artSPACE@16 Gallery (Somerville,
MA), Greenlease Gallery (Kansas City, MO), LynnArts, Inc. (Lynn, MA), Studio
54 (NYC), Wilde Gallery (Williamstown, MA), the Lichtenstein Center for the Arts
(Pittsfield, MA), the Contemporary Art Center (North Adams, MA), and the Williams
Club (NYC).
In 2005, Driscoll was awarded the Berkshire Art Association Fellowship and the
Hubbard J. Hutchinson Memorial Fellowship. After graduation, Driscoll spent a
year teaching art at Thurgood Marshall Middle School in her hometown of Lynn,
Massachusetts, where she became involved with the local art scene, keeping studio
space at Lynn Arts and volunteering at Raw Art Works. After traveling extensively
in Ireland, Italy, and India she moved, in December 2006, to New York City with
partner Walker Waugh, Williams Class of 2002, to use her fellowship and pursue
her dreams of opening a gallery and studio space. In May of 2007 the WORK gallery
was opened in Red Hook, Brookyln.
“Art was definitely a passion of hers,” said Professor Amy Podmore,
one of Driscoll’s studio art professors. “Knowing and working with
Emily was a real honor, not only because she was smart and talented, but because
she wasn’t easily satisfied with her work and strove for the highest and
most honest level while developing her artistic voice. Emily asked the probing
questions and put in tremendous studio time, inspiring those around her.”
An exceptional artist, dedicated friend and community-builder, and beloved member
of the Williams community, Emily Driscoll was fatally hit by a car on November
16, 2007 while walking home to her Brooklyn apartment. Driscoll’s family
has established the Emily Driscoll Foundation for Arts and Athletics, which combines
her two passions. Emily Driscoll: Works will be on view at WCMA through
July 13, 2008.
Williams College Museum of Art
The Williams College Museum of Art is open Tuesday through
Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and on Sunday from 1 to 5 p.m.
Admission is free and the museum is wheelchair accessible.
Publicity Images Available
Publicity images for this and other current
exhibitions are available for use in connection with the exhibition.
PThese images are for members of the press only. Click the thumbnails
below for high resolution images and email
Suzanne Silitch, Director of Public Relations and External
Affairs ,
once you have downloaded them. Please be sure to include the
correct credit information in your publication.
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Emily Driscoll (American, 1982-2007)
Within
the Grasp, 2006
mixed media on paper
Courtesy of the Driscoll family. Photo by Kevin Kennefick,
2008.
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Emily Driscoll (American, 1982-2007)
Untitled, 2006
gouache, pen and ink on paper
Courtesy of the Driscoll
family. Photo by Kevin Kennefick, 2008.
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Emily Driscoll (American, 1982-2007)
Jester, 2006
mixed media on paper
Courtesy of the Driscoll family.
Photo by Kevin Kennefick, 2008.
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Emily Driscoll (American, 1982-2007)
Escape of Thought, 2006
mixed media on paper
Courtesy of the Driscoll family. Photo by Kevin
Kennefick, 2008.
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