Sarah Hollis Perry and Rachel Perry Welty: water, water
July 14, 2012 Sept. 30, 2012
Sarah Hollis Perry and Rachel Perry Welty, Wrapped Stick N 42 degrees 39.770’ W 070 degrees 40.811’ (2012), site-specific installation. Driftwood, silver plumber’s tape.
Water, water is the first collaborative museum show for mother–daughter artists Sarah Hollis Perry and Rachel Perry Welty. In addition to maintaining separate practices, Perry and Welty have been working collaboratively since they overlapped as students at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston in 2000. In their work they are interested in exploring the cyclical nature of both the natural world and the generations in a family.
Perry and Welty organized and filmed their video performance "Drawing a Line with the Tide" in July 2011 using eighty volunteers from the seaside village of Annisquam in Gloucester, Massachusetts where they both live. Moving to avoid the inevitable, the performers demonstrate a futile attempt to control nature with its stubborn adherence to the circling of time.
Among works of photography and sculpture, also included in the exhibition are five short films in which the artists explore aspects of identity and the complexity of the mother-daughter relationship of dependence, independence, and interdependence. One left hand and one right hand perform simple acts of washing and other routine tasks, which engage the viewer in the tease of expectation and uncertainty. All works were made in 2011-2012.
In conjunction with the exhibition, the artists will lead gallery talks on Saturday, July 21 at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. and on Wednesday, August 1 at 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. The talks are $10 members; $20 nonmembers (includes Museum admission). Space is limited. Reservations are required.