How Mother-Daughter Duo Suleika Jaouad and Anne Francey Turned Adversity Into Art
2024-07-17
Painting Through the Pain: A Mother-Daughter Journey of Resilience and Creativity
Suleika Jaouad, a writer known for her Emmy award-winning column "Life, Interrupted" and the New York Times bestselling memoir "Between Two Kingdoms," found herself facing a new challenge when her cancer returned in 2022. Confined to the hospital, she turned to painting as a means of expression, a creative outlet that would eventually lead to a joint exhibition with her mother, Swiss artist Anne Francey. The Alchemy of Blood, a powerful display of their shared experiences, opened last month at ArtYard and runs through September 22nd.
Transforming Confinement into Creativity: A Mother-Daughter Collaboration
Embracing the Unexpected: Suleika's Painting Journey
Suleika Jaouad's journey as a painter began unexpectedly during her second bone marrow transplant. Faced with medication-induced hallucinations and temporary vision impairment that made writing difficult, she turned to painting as a means of expression. Jaouad, who had no formal training as an artist, found herself transcribing the surreal dreamscape of her hospital experience onto the canvas. "I had the great privilege of living in a home where creativity in all of its various expressions was something that was encouraged and considered sacred," Jaouad reflects. "And so first and foremost, I'm a writer as my primary mode of creative expression, but when my leukemia returned in 2010, I knew from having been sick before that to have plans and expectations was going to be a recipe for frustration and disappointment."Jaouad's paintings, created from her hospital bed, became a way for her to find meaning and symbolism in the confinement she experienced. "Rather than trying to ignore the symptoms, I decided instead to transcribe them in the form of these little paintings that I began doing. And they were purely for myself with no expectation of being a good artist or a bad artist, and there was something really liberating about that." The more she painted, the more the space of confinement transformed into a space "incandescent with meaning and symbolism and imagery."
Weaving Protective Talismans: Anne Francey's Ceramic Shields
While Suleika Jaouad was publicly documenting her illness through her writing, her mother, Anne Francey, found herself unable to express her emotions through words. Instead, she turned to art as a means of coping and supporting her daughter. Francey began creating daily ceramic pieces that she assembled into "magical shields" intended to protect Jaouad."The art was my only way to express myself, and that's how I started with these daily ceramic pieces that I started to assemble little by little into these magical shields that were supposed to protect Suleika, which I believe they did," Francey explains. These shields, woven with hospital bracelets and diary excerpts, became a physical manifestation of Francey's desire to shield her daughter from harm.Francey's artistic exploration also led her to create a series of ceramic pieces inspired by a Han Dynasty burial suit, which she saw as a representation of "guaranteeing immortality" for her daughter. "It was very beautiful and peaceful," Francey says, "and that's what inspired me to come up with this technique of tying very small, rectangular pieces that are pierced on each corner and then are tied together and are tied into the form of almost a kimono-like shape."
Connecting Through Creativity: A Mother-Daughter Collaboration
The decision to collaborate on an exhibition was a natural progression for Jaouad and Francey, as their creative journeys had been intertwined since Jaouad's childhood. "Everything I know about visual art, and creativity as a whole, comes from my mom. She's been my greatest teacher, not just on the canvas, but also in terms of adaptability and spontaneity and harnessing that sense of curiosity and play that we have so naturally as children that we often lose as we get older," Jaouad says.The exhibition, titled "The Alchemy of Blood," not only showcases Jaouad's recent paintings but also features three decades of Francey's work, including pieces created during her pregnancy with Jaouad. "It's almost like an ongoing conversation that started with my little one when she first came to my art classes that I was teaching in my studio when my kids were a little, or even before when you were making watercolors actually," Francey reflects.The collaboration has allowed Jaouad and Francey to explore their shared experiences in a deeper, more meaningful way. "It's way beyond the idea of mother and child, it's really communication on a deep level," Francey says. For Jaouad, the creative collaboration has been a source of joy and connection during a challenging time. "It was so wonderful to have this creative work to focus on that, of course, was born out of the circumstances we found ourselves in."
Symbolism and Storytelling: The Interplay of Nature and the Human Experience
Both Jaouad and Francey have incorporated elements of the natural world into their artistic expressions, finding solace and meaning in the language of flora and fauna. Francey's earlier work, created during her pregnancy with Jaouad, was inspired by the "life force that was burgeoning" within her, represented by the plants and flowers that surrounded her in the studio.Jaouad's paintings, on the other hand, often feature central animal characters that she describes as "almost Book of Revelation-esque symbols" representing the "nightmarish, biblical journey" of her recent experiences. "The way I go into making these paintings is that I have some kind of a vision, whether it's in a dream or a figment of one of the hallucinations I had while in the hospital, and that vision keeps persisting until I start to paint it," she explains.The interplay of nature and the human experience is a recurring theme in the exhibition, with Jaouad's Roseate Spoonbill painting serving as a poignant example. The vibrant pink bird, a symbol of her husband's signature color, is connected to a "seasick-green, naked, young woman" – a representation of Jaouad's own journey. "It's the suit he wore in his music video, 'Freedom,' it's the pink suit he wore at our wedding the eve that I was admitted to the hospital. And at the time of my illness, that's what the world was seeing was the kind of dazzling, vibrant, bright colors and not what was happening underneath the surface," she reflects.Through their art, Jaouad and Francey have woven a tapestry of resilience, vulnerability, and the transformative power of creativity. Their collaboration not only showcases their individual artistic expressions but also serves as a testament to the profound connection that can emerge when a mother and daughter navigate life's challenges together.