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From the adult perspective childhood is a time of total potentialof
hopes and dreams that lie in the future. It is a time in which all things
are possible. Elba Damast's interactive, video-based installation Memories
of Things to Come explores childhood memories and their subliminal
presence in every adult. Memories of Things to Come, a major work
developed over the past five years, is being presented at Lehman College
Art Gallery for the first time.
Filmed in her native Venezuela in the area around Falcon, the installation
consists of school desks with sculptural bronze and brass hearts. Gilded mirrors
are mounted on top of each desk. The vintage 1940s desksformerly used
in Bronx schoolsare richly marked by age and their use by generations
of students. The desktops rest on fabricated metal legs that allow an adult
to sit comfortably. They are arranged to suggest the regimented rows of a
classroom and recall those early days in school.
Inside the chambers of each heart there is a videoof children with their
clanging trays in a lunch line, their shouts on the playground, and the silent,
studied details of an empty classroom. There is a video of an old woman sitting
in her home surrounded by photographs and her memories. In another video the
countryside, viewed from the window of a car, streams by like life itself
with views of blue skies, colorful houses, and mountains. The waved patterns
of a desert landscape repeat the deeply lined face of the old woman. In another
video a voiceover talks of love. One of the hearts plays a live feed of the
installation from a camera in the gallery, giving an omniscient perspective
and allowing the viewer to be a participant in the classroom and, at the same
time, above it all.
The viewer is perhaps the most important element of the work, bringing it
to life. Damast believes that visiting this classroom will bring the viewer
back in time to school days past, recalling those earliest experiences of
collective learning. The viewer "looks into the heart" to evoke
memories. The title, a reference to Proust, suggests both the past and the
future. The mirror and the live video are a reminder of the present. Sitting
at the desk one is poised between the memories of the past, the realities
of the present, and the future that lies ahead. The installation probes the
expectations of childhood and the realities of adulthoodwhere we started,
how we got here, and where we are going. Memories of Things to Come
is a richly layered work in both content and meaning. As in much of Damast's
work, its multiple elements combine to create a complex visual allegory.
The heart remains a potent symbol throughout Damast's work. It is through
the heart that memories are interpreted and hopes and dreams are built. It
is the center of one's being. In her earlier work, Damast repeatedly probed
the house as a symbol and an image. Like those earlier works, the heart is
now the subject to which she obsessively returns, making drawings, paintings,
and sculptures of this symbol. The heart she renders is not the Valentine
symbol but an anatomical one, "the heart that beats in everyone...the
heart that seemingly never changes and never tires." For Damast, as long
as it continues to beat "there exists hope." The exhibition includes
three sketchbooks, numerous drawings, and two small "palm" sculptures
designed to fit into the palm of one's hand.
Damast was born on the island of Pedernales in the Delta Amacuro in Venezuela.
She lived in Paris before settling in New York in the early seventies.
Susan Hoeltzel
Director
Lehman College Art Gallerys exhibitions and programs are made possible
through the generous support of:
Bronx Council on the Arts Cultural Venture Fund
Bronx Council on the Arts through the U.S. Small Business Administration
New York City Department of Cultural Affairs
National Endowment for the Arts
New York State Council on the Arts
Milton and Sally Avery Arts Foundation
Greentree Foundation
Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro
Edith and Herbert Lehman Foundation
JPMorgan Chase
Citigroup
Friends of Lehman College Art Gallery
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