Material Recovery. I have been painting stripes as part of my work for about 10 years now. Up until about 3 years ago, the stripes were integrated into my drawings which were drawings of everything I spent money on. One red stripe represented each dollar I spent, and one green stripe represented one dollar I earned.
I have been writing down everything I do and spend money on every day for about
10 years. I made my last list on January 24, 2007. I found that it made me too
sad to look back on my life at that point and reflect on it in such detail. Instead,
I would rather remember and record with a more selective memory.
With that in mind, I've set about remembering my most recent trip to India. The
one I took to get pregnant! This February, having found out that my fallopian tubes
are blocked, I realized that the only way I could get pregnant was through in vitro
fertilization. However, neither my insurance nor any insurance that I could get
as an individual covers IVF and in the US, the bill for that procedure runs up to
about $20,000. After a bit of research, I found that in India, the cost is only
about $3,000 and at that point, one of my partner's cousins in India volunteered
to be our donor.
It worked! At this moment, I'm pregnant.
The other thing I've been working on is kind of purging text from my work as the
lists fade out. Instead, I've created all the letters from my last list (that
one from January 24, 2007) out of my trash that I've been saving for the past 4
months. These letters are 3 dimensional and will be in a big pile with only a few
recognizable words in that jumble that explain why I stopped writing the lists.
The Stripe Factory
I have been painting stripes as part of my work for about 10 years now.
Up until about 3 years ago, the stripes were integrated into my drawings which were
drawings of everything I spent money on. One red stripe represented each dollar
I spent, and one green stripe represented one dollar I earned. There were also
grey stripes which represented debt.
About 3 years ago, I started making panels that were just stripes using the data
of my financial life. The first of these represented one month of red stripes and
green stripes, painted in the order which money came in and out of my bank account.
In addition to making these monthly panels, I made a series of very large panels
that represented major financial events in my life.
The last series of panels represented my building mortgage which has 627,000 grey
stripes for each dollar I owe my bank. This many stripes would have taken me more
than a year to paint on my own, so I had to hire 14 people a day to help me paint
the stripes to meet my deadline.
The production of this work really inspired me. The overall composition of the
grey panels reflects each stripe painter's hand so the stripes become a metaphorical
genetic map that identifies each person who contributed to the work.
Six months ago, I began focusing on this aspect of my work by creating a stripe
factory that spins labor into very dense matter. This factory will produce no toxic
waste, no by-products, and will create a pleasant working environment for its workers
who are acknowledged in the final panel.
The stripes have become unmoored from my personal data, and instead, represent only
their own production. For this reason, I've chosen to mix the reds and greens resulting
in 8 shades of earth color that will make up the field of each panel.
Panels can be custom ordered starting with 50,000 stripes in either a horizontal,
vertical or square format. Each stripe will cost $.15. $.05 of this cost will be
collected to pay the stripe painters each of whom will earn $.05 per stripe they
paint. The remaining $.10 will be collected upon completion and delivery of the
panel and will be split between the gallery and myself. The stripe painters will
sit in the gallery going about their own business until an order comes in, at which
point they will start painting. This project will continue for approximately one
year.
- Danica Phelps
Reception for the Artist Thursday, June 12, 6-8 pm
Zach Feuer Gallery
530 West 24th Street - New York
June Hours: Tuesday-Saturday, 10-6
July Hours: Tuesday-Friday, 10-6
Free admission