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XI Jesis
is Nailed to the Cross
Ginger Geyer
Crucifixion
Kit
My trompe
l'oeil sculpture is made of glazed porcelain, a medium that is persnickety
and prone to technical flaws. Sometimes the flaws enter into the theological
meaning of the work; sometimes they ruin my lofty intentions. There
is an essential playfulness in my work that I hope prevents it from
being obnoxiously earnest or preachy. I comb my middle-class American
world for sacramental objects - such as fire hydrants, toys, make-up
mirrors and sleeping bags - and invest them with scripture and art history.
This rooting around in tradition fires my passion. If the work succeeds
in defamiliarizing the familiar, the incongruities in it may collide
and expose divine mystery. I write stories and poems that are integral
to the sculpture, and this combination probes how our "graven images"
can become agents of grace. Transformation is thus a keen interest,
and I have a hunch it is proportionately related to the inclusiveness
of our love. In these times, I am alert to art's two-fold prophetic
role: to critique our society and to energize us toward hope. I find
that art-making grounds me in everyday realism that prompts my sense
of wonder and transcendence. Art embodies this ache for new life as
it embraces the wild ambiguities of our mundane, tragic, and delightful
world. I enjoy tweaking the ambiguities.
One
thing Jesus had in common with the guy who nailed him to the cross was
tools. As a carpenter, Jesus was well acquainted with hammers and saws
and nails. Like every good artisan, he probably had favorite ones that
felt like an extension of his arm. A good tool fits the hand just so;
it enables the job to be done artfully, effortlessly. No doubt having
such tools used against him was yet another form of betrayal.A friend
who teaches woodworking helped me play with ideas for this sculpture.
Then he mailed me two rough leather carpenter's aprons, or tool belts.
He had found them in the street a year ago, apparently fallen off of
a truck. Knowing they were broken in and probably like second nature
to their owners, he ran a lost and found ad in the newspaper. No response,
so I inherited them, sans tools but still containing a few nails and
square pencils. They are much richer than the spanking new ones at the
hardware store, and served well as models for the "Crucifixion
Kit." It is harsh, but then so is the eleventh Station of the Cross,
"Jesus Is Nailed to the Cross." This porcelain rendition of
a tool belt is beat-up and hanging out to dry. It clanks with favorite
gear. Some tools dangle off of it, others are tucked away. Each represents
one of the traditional "instruments of the passion." They
have been used too much. There is the hammer (yet to be redeemed by
the "If I Had a Hammer" song) and a saw (warped here by the
firing or by very hard wood?). Suddenly after the first kiln firing
was loaded, I realized I'd forgotten the nails. What an essential thing
to omit-were they too hard to face? I resisted my denial and quickly
rolled out several bent nails, sprigging them out holes and pockets,
and fired them wet.
There's the flat red pencil for preliminary markings, and a magic marker
for making a "King of the Jews" sign. Then the oddities-a
small gardener's shovel for digging a hole for the cross (here it appears
to be suspended, as it helpfully covers a crack in the piece), and a
power drill for heavy-duty work (why I do not know but it really makes
me cringe). There is a nod to the Romans with a measuring tape, just
to make certain that things measure up, as if only what can be quantified
really counts. A fireplace poker, an emblem of hearth and home, stands
in for the spear. It broke in the firing, and isn't easy to repair.
Perhaps that signals the irrevocability of the pain we inflict upon
others
and indeed this sculpture is about we who hurt Jesus, not
they who killed him. The weirdest object in the tool belt is the gas
station squeegee. It is a piece I made a few years ago called "Self-Service",
in response to Jesus' dying statement, "I thirst." He was
offered a sponge on a stick, saturated with sour wine. Was this an act
of mockery or of compassion? The scriptural passages don't really say.
Was it vinegar, often used as an antiseptic? Or wine, to dull the pain?
Either way, sour wine on a sponge doesn't sound like a thirst-quencher.
Perhaps the soldier offered it with good intentions; perhaps he felt
some satisfaction in doing a charitable thing. In this case, a squeegee
wipes the surface so we can see more clearly. But would you put this
nasty thing in your mouth? It is possible that his ambiguous act was
the final blow, for right after that, Jesus died. There are ten tool
items here and could easily be more, like a chainsaw, an extension cord,
or stain remover. I forgot the coins and dice. No dice. Rejected the
ladder and the torn garment on a technicality-there are size limitations
with porcelain. Considered adding a level, to be sure that the cross
was square
but then doubted that anybody would care if it was square
or not
after all, we might own a bunch of tools, but that doesn't
make us artisans. We could refer to a step-by-step booklet, like the
"Four Spiritual Laws," illustrated with anatomical drawings
of hands and feet, so we'd know the most efficient spot to drive in
the nails. So much could be used and misused here. The piece could've
taken on bibleidolatry, that literalism that forces people to praise
and advocate genocide, slavery, and bigotry just because they appear
in the scripture. I had wanted to add a painting on the front pocket
that would show how we become desensitized to violence. What conditions
us to kill love? What blinds us to suffering, prepares us to become
the crucifier? What is at the root of this, fear? Some examples of bad
art came to mind, such as Hitler's watercolors and Thomas Kinkade's
paintings. Nothing horrible about those sappy, banal utopias, but one
of them lured folks out of reality into an exclusive nostalgia that
became horrific. A friend suggested Wiley Coyote and the Roadrunner,
always fighting and falling off cliffs, popping back up unharmed as
if violence has no consequences. But in the end, the front pocket simply
took on Home Depot stenciling: Do It Yourself. Rowan Williams, the new
Archbishop of Canterbury, wrote this in Resurrection:"To be given
the picture of myself as crucifier is to make an important discovery
about the nature of suffering itself. Pain is not only what I endure,
but also what I transmit
. To know ourselves as crucifiers is to
know ourselves as responsible: We are able to say yes or no to violence,
to accept or protest. The risen Christ established firmly and inescapably
the polarity between oppressor and victim as a fundamental reality of
our world; there is a gulf to be bridged; a wound that will not be healed
until we have seen that it is bleeding
. As uncomfortable as we
sometimes are with such, it may do us well to see ourselves as the ones
who turned the Holy Family away, who made Love be born in a stable,
to see ourselves not as on the cross, but nailing someone to it."Do
It Yourself. That temptation is ever before us in this age of individualism
and self-help. Artists and others who work in solitude know it well.
But we also know we do not create or destroy all alone-we are all in
this together, both as communities and as nations. My own intentions
were to create this Kit so that I might better intuit the crucifixion.
(I long since gave up on understanding it.) I wanted the piece to offer
hope to others regardless of how brutal or convicting its primary message
is. But was there any hope on Good Friday? Any hope for those who skillfully
affixed human flesh to raw wood? Sometimes we have to hunt for hope,
for it is subliminal. Luke 23:34 has it, in that gloriously radical
declaration of grace for the two criminals who flanked Jesus, and for
those who still torture him. Listen for that still, small voice that
offers hope over pain:
"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do
"
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