Johanna Poethig
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Johanna Poethig (born 1956) is an American
Bay Area The San Francisco Bay Area, commonly known as the Bay Area, is a region of California surrounding and including San Francisco Bay, and anchored by the cities of Oakland, San Francisco, and San Jose. The Association of Bay Area Governments ...
visual, public and performance artist whose work includes murals, paintings, sculpture and multimedia installations.Helfand, Glen. "Johanna Poethig," ''Bay Area Reporter'', 1999.Burns, Lucy Mae San Pablo. "Your ''terno'''s draggin': Fashioning Filipino American performance," ''Women & Performance: a journal of feminist theory'', July 2012, p. 199–217. Retrieved July 8, 2020. She has split her practice between community-based public art and gallery and performance works that mix satire, feminism and cultural critique.Drescher, Tim
''San Francisco Murals: Community Creates Its Muse, 1914–1990''
St. Paul, MN: Pogo Press, 1994.
Cramer, Laura Jaye
"Kitschy, Trashy, Intelligent: 'Glamorgeddon. The Spectacle'"
'' SF Weekly'', January 6, 2015. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
Corbin, Mary
"Johanna Poethig Uses Her Art for Sociopolitical Inquiry,"
''Oakland Magazine'', April 26, 2018. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
Poethig emerged in the 1980s as socially engaged collaborations with youth and marginalized groups (e.g., by artists such as
Tim Rollins and K.O.S. Tim Rollins (June 10, 1955 – December 22, 2017) was an American artist who together with the art collaborative K.O.S. formed the art-group Tim Rollins and K.O.S (Kids of Survival).
) gained increasing attention;Tanner, Marcia. "Auspicious Entries: Artists who collaborate with youth," ''Artweek'', May 21, 1992, p. 24–5. she has worked as an artist and educator with diverse immigrant communities, children from five to seventeen, senior citizens, incarcerated women and mental health patients, among others.Amirrezvani, Anita. "Women's work," ''Contra Costa Times'', February 6, 2000, p. C12.Chang, Gordon H., Mark Johnson and Paul Karlstrom
''Asian American Art: A History, 1850–1970''
Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2008, p. 263. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
Viana, France
"Her Mission Was in the Cards,"
''Positively Filipino'', January 18, 2017. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
''Artweek'' critic Meredith Tromble places her in an activist tradition running from
Jacques-Louis David Jacques-Louis David (; 30 August 1748 – 29 December 1825) was a French painter in the Neoclassicism, Neoclassical style, considered to be the preeminent painter of the era. In the 1780s, his cerebral brand of history painting marked a change in ...
through
Diego Rivera Diego Rivera (; December 8, 1886 – November 24, 1957) was a Mexican painter. His large frescoes helped establish the Mexican muralism, mural movement in Mexican art, Mexican and international art. Between 1922 and 1953, Rivera painted mural ...
to
Barbara Kruger Barbara Kruger (born January 26, 1945) is an American conceptual artist and collagist associated with the Pictures Generation. She is most known for her visual word art that consists of black-and-white photographs, overlaid with declarative ca ...
, writing that her work, including more than fifty major murals and installations, combines "the idealist and caustic."Tromble, Meredith. "Johanna Poethig," ''Driven'', San Francisco: Togonon Gallery, 2007. Poethig has been commissioned to create
public art Public art is art in any Media (arts), media whose form, function and meaning are created for the general public through a public process. It is a specific art genre with its own professional and critical discourse. Public art is visually and phy ...
projects throughout the Bay Area and California, and in Chicago, Milwaukee, Cuba and Tbilisi, Georgia.Mosher, Mike. "Neighborhood Art Traffic Signals: Johanna Poethig's 'Freeway Prophecy' Mural," ''Bad Subjects'', October 1998.Lara, Alison Neumer
"City's rich cultural blooms in mural,"
''Chicago Tribune'', December 7, 2005. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
Garchik, Leah
"Hummingbirds in the Tenderloin,"
''San Francisco Chronicle'', September 1, 2011. Retrieved July 8, 2020. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
Drake, Cathryn
"Tri, Tri Again,"
''Artforum'', November 2012. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
She has exhibited internationally, and at the
Los Angeles County Museum of Art The Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) is an art museum located on Wilshire Boulevard in the Miracle Mile vicinity of Los Angeles. LACMA is on Museum Row, adjacent to the La Brea Tar Pits (George C. Page Museum). LACMA was founded in 1961 ...
,
Bronx Museum of the Arts The Bronx Museum of the Arts (BxMA), also called the Bronx Museum of Art or simply the Bronx Museum, is an American cultural institution located in Concourse, Bronx, New York. The museum focuses on contemporary and 20th-century works created by ...
,
Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive The Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA, formerly abbreviated as BAM/PFA) are a combined art museum, repertory movie theater, and film archive associated with the University of California, Berkeley. Lawrence Rinder was Director ...
(BAM/PFA),
Asian Art Museum (San Francisco) The Asian Art Museum of San Francisco – Chong-Moon Lee Center for Asian Art and Culture"About"
Asian Art Museum website. ...
and
Yerba Buena Center for the Arts Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (YBCA) is a multi-disciplinary Contemporary art, contemporary arts center in San Francisco, California, United States. Located in Yerba Buena Gardens, YBCA features visual art, performance, and film/video that cel ...
. She has been recognized with awards from the
National Endowment for the Arts The National Endowment for the Arts (NEA) is an independent agency of the United States federal government that offers support and funding for projects exhibiting artistic excellence. It was created in 1965 as an independent agency of the feder ...
(NEA) and
California Arts Council The California Arts Council functions as a state agency headquartered in Sacramento, California. Its board comprises eight council members who receive appointments from both the Governor A governor is an politician, administrative leader and ...
, among others.Los Angeles County Museum of Art
''Made in California: Art, Image, and Identity, 1900-2000''
Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2000. Retrieved June 27, 2019.
Ressler, Susan R. (ed)
''Women Artists of the American West''
Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company Inc., 2003. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
Poethig is based in Oakland, California.


Early life and career

Poethig was born in 1956 in
Morristown, New Jersey Morristown () is a Town (New Jersey), town in and the county seat of Morris County, New Jersey, Morris County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey.
.Herbert, Susan. "Muralist Johanna Poethig," ''San Francisco Independent'', January 19, 1989, p. 13. Her parents, Eunice and Richard, both Presbyterian missionaries, moved the family to Manila shortly after Poethig's birth; she grew up in a Filipino community, speaking fluent
Tagalog Tagalog may refer to: Language * Tagalog language, a language spoken in the Philippines ** Old Tagalog, an archaic form of the language ** Batangas Tagalog, a dialect of the language * Tagalog script, the writing system historically used for Tagal ...
and learning about social issues and global politics from a Filipino perspective.Alba, Victoria. "Sino Ka? Ano Ka? Contemporary Art," i
''Pinay Power: Theorizing the Filipina/American Experience''
Melinda L. de Jesús (ed.), New York: Routledge, 2005, p. 297–9. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
In 1972, the family moved to Chicago, where she studied at the
American Academy of Art The American Academy of Art College was a private for-profit art school in Chicago, Illinois. It was founded in 1923 for the education of fine and commercial arts students. In July 2024, the college announced its pending closure. History The ...
and became interested in public art, by
William Walker William Walker may refer to: Arts * William Walker (engraver) (1791–1867), mezzotint engraver of portrait of Robert Burns * William Sidney Walker (1795–1846), English Shakespearean critic * William Walker (composer) (1809–1875), American Bap ...
among others. In the late 1970s, she attended
University of California, Santa Cruz The University of California, Santa Cruz (UC Santa Cruz or UCSC) is a public university, public Land-grant university, land-grant research university in Santa Cruz, California, United States. It is one of the ten campuses in the University of C ...
, earning a BA in anthropology, politics and art in 1980. After graduating, Poethig moved to San Francisco and made connections with women artists and the SoMA (
South of Market South of Market (SoMa) is a neighborhood in San Francisco, California, so named due to its location south of Market Street. It contains several sub-neighborhoods including South Beach, Yerba Buena, and Rincon Hill. SoMa is home to many of ...
) Filipino community.Lorca, Leonardo. "Cuando la Avenida Broadway era la 'Calle de la eternidad'", ''La Opinion'' (Los Angeles), 1993. Her work on a mural for
The Women's Building The Women's Building is a women-led non-profit arts and education community center located in San Francisco, California. The center advocates self-determination, gender equality and social justice. The four-story building rents to multiple tenant ...
with six artists in 1982 set her on a collaborative, public-art path. In the subsequent decade, she won mural commissions in the Bay Area and Los Angeles and California Arts Council awards; she also taught art at a SoMA mental health center. Poethig augmented these experiences with graduate studies at
Mills College Mills College at Northeastern University in Oakland, California is part of Northeastern University's global university system. Mills College was founded as the Young Ladies Seminary in 1852 in Benicia, California; it was relocated to Oakland in ...
(MFA, 1992), which added a more conceptual layer to her work. In 1994, she founded Inner City Public Arts Projects for Youth and served as artistic director for six years on a number of collaborative projects in San Francisco's Tenderloin and SoMA neighborhoods.Zane, Maitland. "This Public Art Delights the Eye," ''San Francisco Chronicle'', May 15, 1995, p. A12.Hutton, Stan. "The art of Johanna Poethig," ''San Francisco Study Center Central City Extra'', 1995. That same year, she joined the faculty of the Visual and Public Art department at
California State University, Monterey Bay California State University, Monterey Bay (CSUMB or Cal State Monterey Bay) is a public university located in Monterey County, California, United States. The main campus is situated on the site of the former military base Fort Ord, spanning the ...
(CSUMB), where she taught until 2018 and is Professor Emerita.Ferrera, Andrei. "Artfully Dedicated," ''Insights'', 1998.


Work

In both public and gallery/performance art, Poethig draws on her cross-cultural experience and social consciousness to create inclusive work intended to offer an alternative to dominant advertising messages and American conventions of individualism and competition. Writers place her among a second generation of San Francisco community muralists, distinguished by their greater eclecticism, departure from the original Mexican mural model, and focus on identity issues. Her murals are noted for their mix of realist and expressionist modes, balance of message and aesthetics, atypical use of stylization and abstraction, and emphasis on previously unrecognized Southeast Asian communities.Moore, Sylvia
''Yesterday and Tomorrow: California Women Artists''
Midmarch Arts Books, 1989, p. 47. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
Drescher, Tim. "Community murals: a step ahead of the times," ''Artweek'', April 1992. Poethig's gallery/performance work takes a satirical feminist approach, often critiquing glamour, consumerism and constructions of identity.Matthews, Lydia. "Recipes for Pathological Happiness: The RX Series," ''Johanna Poethig: RX'', San Francisco: Washington Square Gallery, 2000.


Murals

Many of Poethig's murals pay tribute to San Francisco immigrant groups. ''Ang Lipi ni Lapu-Lapu'' (1984) depicts the origin legends and history of Filipino immigration to the United States, while ''Gabrielino Nation'' (1995, San Pedro, with Roberto Salas) recognizes the Gabrielinos, the area's earliest inhabitants.Marshall, Bob. "Milk Mural Madness," ''San Francisco Sentinel'', July 10, 1987, p. 1, 9.Dunitz, Robin J. and James Prigoff
''Painting the Towns: Murals of California''
Austin, TX: University of Texas, 1997. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
Ohanesian, Liz
"10 Awesome Pieces of Public Art in San Pedro,"
''LA Weekly'', July 19, 2016. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
In ''Lakas Sambayanan'' (People's Power) (1986), she commemorated the peaceful overthrow of the
Marcos dictatorship At 7:15 p.m. on September 23, 1972, President Ferdinand Marcos announced on television that he had placed the Philippines under martial law, stating he had done so in response to the "communist threat" posed by the newly founded Communist Party ...
and rise to power of
Corazon Aquino María Corazón "Cory" Sumulong Cojuangco-Aquino (; January 25, 1933 – August 1, 2009) was a Filipino politician who served as the 11th president of the Philippines and the first woman president in the country, from Presidency of Corazon ...
in the Philippines; its surreal central image depicts marchers pouring out of a shattered
Ferdinand Marcos Ferdinand Emmanuel Edralin Marcos Sr. (September 11, 1917 – September 28, 1989) was a Filipino lawyer, politician, dictator, and Kleptocracy, kleptocrat who served as the tenth president of the Philippines from 1965 to 1986. He ruled the c ...
bust alongside images of Aquino cradling her slain husband, protesters and symbols of the country's catholic, Muslim and historic influences.Moreno, Cherie M. Querol. "I-Hotel Muralist: FilAm in her heart," ''Philippine News'', August 6–12, 2010, p. A1, A10. The ''I-Hotel Mural'' (2010)—on San Francisco's International Hotel, a home to pioneer Chinese and Filipino immigrants demolished in 1977 and reopened in 2005—depicts the long struggle for low-income housing and features former (evicted) residents and activists in that fight.Garchik, Leah
"Pay-as-you-go Ferry Building tea party,"
''San Francisco Chronicle'', July 28, 2010. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
The multistory ''Calle de la Eternidad'' (1993) represents the dislocation, adaptation and aspiration of the Los Angeles Latina/o community through a monumental pair of hands outstretched toward the sky (and background skyscrapers), which emerge from an
Aztec The Aztecs ( ) were a Mesoamerican civilization that flourished in central Mexico in the Post-Classic stage, post-classic period from 1300 to 1521. The Aztec people included different Indigenous peoples of Mexico, ethnic groups of central ...
calendar containing an
Octavio Paz Octavio Paz Lozano (March 31, 1914 – April 19, 1998) was a Mexican poet and diplomat. For his body of work, he was awarded the 1977 Jerusalem Prize, the 1981 Miguel de Cervantes Prize, the 1982 Neustadt International Prize for Literature, a ...
poem; the title references the Broadway location, once a funeral procession route known as the "Street of Eternity."Wetherbe, Jamie
"High-tech plans give new life to downtown mural,"
''Los Angeles Times'', June 16, 2012. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
''Public Art Review''. "Muralist Spotlight," Fall 2005. The colorful, three-dimensional ''Tiene la lumbre por dentro'' (He Has the Fire Within Him) (2000, Sonoma State University) honors
César Chavez Cesario Estrada Chavez (; ; March 31, 1927 – April 23, 1993) was an American labor leader and civil rights activist. Along with Dolores Huerta and lesser known Gilbert Padilla, he co-founded the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA), ...
and the Farm Workers Movement with images of Chavez,
Dolores Huerta Dolores Huerta (born April 10, 1930) is an American labor leader and feminist activist. After working for several years with the Community Service Organization (CSO), she co-founded the National Farm Workers Association (NFWA) with fellow activ ...
. the Filipino labor movement and workers' hands, Chavez's words, and non-traditional layered wood surfaces expressing the rawness of the land.''Sonoma County Independent'', "Chavez tribute," June 4–10, 1998.''Public Art Review''. "Recent Projects," Winter 1999, p. 42. Some of Poethig's other well-known murals include the four-story ''
Harvey Milk Harvey Bernard Milk (May 22, 1930 – November 27, 1978) was an American politician and the first openly gay man to be elected to public office in California, as a member of the San Francisco Board of Supervisors. Milk was born and raised i ...
Memorial Mural'' (1988), depicting Milk in a free-spirited scene at a pride parade;Waugh, Dexter. "Panel approves compromise for mural about Milk," ''San Francisco Examiner'', 1988. ''To Cause To Remember'' (1992), an 80-foot image of a fallen
Statue of Liberty The Statue of Liberty (''Liberty Enlightening the World''; ) is a colossal neoclassical sculpture on Liberty Island in New York Harbor, within New York City. The copper-clad statue, a gift to the United States from the people of French Thir ...
chained at the feet, suggesting the nation's unrealized intentions; the 200-foot-long ''Stamps of Victory'' along Los Angeles's 110 Freeway (commissioned for the 1994 World Cup), which celebrates sport as a conduit for communication and international relations with global soccer-themed postage stamps;Martin, Hugo and Lorenza Munoz
"Taggers, Caltrans Take a Toll on Freeway Murals,"
''Los Angeles Times'', May 3, 2001. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
Snow, Shauna

''Los Angeles Times'', March 30, 1994. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
and ''Loop Tattoo'' (2005, Chicago), which employs a central swirl of dancers, musicians and athletes to represent the city's rich cultural life and a community sensibility. Two later works expand on the community theme: ''Intertwined'' (2010) encircles a Tenderloin low-income housing development in a colorful, eight-story ceramic-tile ribbon with outstretched hands and uplifting text, while the glass-mosaic ''Rainbow Power'' (2019, Oakland) uses a colorful light-wave-like backdrop that intersects local youth figures as a metaphor for the benefits of shared culture, ideas and friendship.Dudnick Laura
"Time-lapse photos show SF’s changing skyline,"
''San Francisco Examiner'', October 22, 2015. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
Fiore, Heather
"Installation Case Study: Connecting to the community,"
''Tile Magazine'', July 18, 2019. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
City of Oakland
"Measure KK at Work: Rainbow Recreation Center,"
News. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
''Skylight: Transmission of Knowledge/Windows to Justice'' (2019, CSUMB) takes a more global perspective that includes an oculus open to the sky and symbolic references to the environment and sustenance, justice, ancient and modern knowledge, and multi-national perspectives.''CSUMB Magazine''
"New Home for Liberal Arts,"
December 20, 2019. Retrieved July 8, 2020.


Other public works

Poethig's other collaborative public projects include ceramic-tile floor works and reliefs developed from fantastical children's drawings and youth workshops, playground and park sculptural installations, and city-sponsored poster and advertisement programs that incorporate conceptual approaches and critiques of capitalism.Armstrong, David. "If Dogs Could Fly: New Fantasy Mural Unveiled at Boeddeker," ''Tenderloin Times'', April 1990, p. 15.Boye, Bob. "Kids' Imaginations Take Flight In Boeddeker Rec Center Mural," ''Tenderloin Times'', December 1988, p. 13.Golonu, Berin. "'How I Saved San Francisco: New Media Heroes of Our Urban Environment'", ''Artweek'', 2000. For ''Underdog Ad Agency'' (1995–6, with Delfina Piretti), she designed bus shelter posters with incarcerated women that lampooned corporate marketing strategies and encouraged positive change; a 1999 collaboration with prison inmates and CSUMB students produced bus shelter posters that addressed rising incarceration rates. Subsequent projects include "How I Saved San Francisco: New Media Heroes" (2000)—featuring youths cast as social-change heroes in imitation-movie posters installed in city kiosks—and "Cab Top Ads" (2001, also with Piretti), a series of ads on taxis that offered alternatives to media images of women and critical messages regarding objectification, sex work and gender issues.''San Francisco Examiner''. "Cab Top Art Ads," June 7, 2001, p. C3.''Public Art Review''. "Cab Top Ads," Fall-Winter 2001, p. 45. In 2014, Poethig and
Mildred Howard Mildred Howard (born 1945) is an African-American artist known primarily for her sculptural installation and mixed-media assemblages.Baker, Kenneth"Artist Intrigued by Interaction of Materials, Ability to Revise at Will", ''San Francisco Chronic ...
were chosen by the East Bay Transit board as lead artists, with Peter Richards and Joyce Hsu, to integrate public art into the architecture of 34 planned stations along a new 9.5-mile system.Levin, Sam
"East Bay Bus Rapid Transit Project Brings on Artists to Help Design 34 Stations,"
''East Bay Express'', April 24, 2014. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
The project, ''Cultural Corridor/Urban Flow''—completed in early 2021—uses the title's flow motif, visually connecting the stations with a ribbon of descriptive and poetic words and images reflecting the many neighborhoods it passes through. Its elements were rendered in laser-cut aluminum on handrail panels and decorative windscreens.Porges, Maria
"Poetry in Motion: A Conversation with Mildred Howard and Johanna Poethig,"
''Sculpture'', May 19, 2021. Retrieved July 13, 2021.
They incorporate community input, ideas and facts as well as aesthetic cues (e.g., traditional cultures' cut papercrafts, architecture, colors), while also taking advantage of shifts in light and cast shadow conditions to create. shifting visual interest.


Gallery work and performance

Poethig's wide-ranging gallery and performance art investigates issues involving colonization, identity and glamour, consumerism and technology through statuettes and paintings, subversive mock products, installations, games, and performance. She has collaborated on video/sound collaborations with her husband, composer
Chris Brown Christopher Maurice Brown (born May 5, 1989) is an American singer, songwriter, dancer, and actor. A Pop music, pop and hip-hop-influenced contemporary R&B, R&B musician who works in a variety of genres, he has been called the "Honorific nic ...
, and performances with the artist collective DIWA Arts and the group WIGband (herself, Barbara Golden, and sometimes others).Erlich, Linda. "WIG-ish Humor," ''The San Francisco Bay Guardian'', June 21, 1989.Harmanci, Reyhan
"Pow! Mini Performance Art Festival,"
''San Francisco Chronicle'', March 6, 2008. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
Matthews, Lydia. "Camp out: DIWA Arts and the Bayanihan Spirit," ''TDR'', Winter 1998, p. 115–132. Since 1986, WIGband has produced politically incorrect shows ("Lifestyles of the Poor and Shameless", 1989), films (the exercise video ''Silver Abs and Golden Buns''), songs and CDs (''Lick Me to Heaven''). Much of Poethig's work explores mainstream and cross-cultural constructions of identity. Her NEA-award-winning "The Untouchables" (1996) consisted of small ceramic figures cast from the ubiquitous
Barbie Barbie is a fashion doll created by American businesswoman Ruth Handler, manufactured by American toy and entertainment company Mattel and introduced on March 9, 1959. The toy was based on the German Bild Lilli doll, Bild Lilli doll which Hand ...
doll mold that were adapted into representations of the American white upper class. That work mutated into "Babaylan Barbies" depicting Filipino archetypes and idols—including a shamaness, beauty pageant queen and biker—which were featured in a Manila/San Francisco exhibit of Filipina-American artists at San Francisco State University in 1998.Tromble, Meredith. "Notes on Class," ''Artweek'', 1997.Hancock, Emily. "A New Race of Barbies," ''Moxie Magazine'', Spring 1999. Poethig's exhibition ''Barrionics Does Barrioque'' (2003, with Anne Perez and Rico Reyes) explored similar themes through paintings (gold-framed vignettes of body parts) and mixed-media performance that employed exaggeration and incongruity to comment on Filipinaness, femininity, imperialism and globalization; ''Artweeks Mark van Proyen described it as "a new performativity" embracing camp, cultural leveling and mockery of commodity fetishism.Van Proyen, Mark. "'Barrionics does Barrioque' at Togonon Gallery," ''Artweek'', May 2003, p. 16. In 2016, Poethig curated "Songs for Women Living With War" (ProArts Gallery), which memorialized and gave voice to the experiences of women in war, in particular, Filipino "
comfort women Comfort women were women and girls forced into sexual slavery by the Imperial Japanese Armed Forces in occupied countries and territories before and during World War II. The term ''comfort women'' is a translation of the Japanese , a euphemism ...
" during World War II.Tagle, Thea Quiray
"Teaching and Talking About Art and Performance in Unprecedented Times,"
''Art Practical'', March 23, 2017. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
Santos, Dorothy
"Artists Help Break the Silence Around Abuse of Women in War,"
''Hyperallergic'', November 1, 2016. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
Poethig contributed ''Bahay Ni Lola'' (2016), a large, three-walled installation/monument that included the faces of comfort women, a woven ''
banig Baníg ( ) are traditional handwoven mats of the Philippines predominantly used as a sleeping mat or a floor mat. Banig mats are typically made from pandanus or sedge leaves. They can also utilize other materials, including buri palm leaves, ree ...
'' (Filipino grass mat) draped with stories from women collected by author
M. Evelina Galang M. Evelina Galang (born Harrisburg, PA in 1961) is an American novelist, short story writer, editor, essayist, educator, and activist of Filipina descent. Her novel ''One Tribe'' won the AWP Novel of the Year Prize in 2004. Biography Maria ...
, and voices knit into an abstract sound composition by Anne Perez. Poethig also frequently examines the excesses and contradictions of consumer capitalism. In the late 1990s, she conceived a fictitious consumer products conglomeration (International House of Cargo) and alter-ego (CEO Angel Savage, costumed as a hospital candy-striper/nun) in order to satirize the "cargo cult" mentality of American market culture.Helfand, Glen. "Johanna Poethig," ''Johanna Poethig: RX'', San Francisco: Washington Square Gallery, 2000. The firm's painted and sculpted offerings included technologically advanced pharmaceuticals (the "RX Series"), new age cures (Omega 3-infused cigarettes and ''Spring Chicken: Genomix'', a bio-engineered, therapeutic snack food), beauty products and fashions, pitched as effortless solutions to a conflicting array of fears, fetishes and neuroses. In two multimedia exhibitions—"The Glamour Summit" (2000) and "Glamorgeddon" (2015)—Poethig considered glamour as a form of colonization and social construct, poking fun at fashion aesthetics and obsessions with paintings, performances and refigured objects (e.g., bedazzled hardhats, traffic cones and bowling pins);Eddy, Cheryl. "It's a look," ''Bay Guardian'', February 13, 2000.Carlson, Michelle
"All That Glitters Isn’t Gold: Glamorgeddon at SOMArts Gallery,"
''KQED'', January 14, 2015. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
reviewers describe the shows as "kitschy, trashy, intelligent" balances of "extravagance and thoughtfulness."Nataraj, Nirmala
"'Glamorgeddon: The Spectacle' looks to entertain and empower,"
'' San Francisco Chronicle'', January 7, 2015. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
Abney, Andrea
"'Glamorgeddon' explores meaning of glamour at SOMArts,"
''SF Gate'', January 7, 2015. Retrieved July 8, 2020.
In the show "Driven" (2007, Togonon Gallery), Poethig narrowed her focus to the American dependency on large, gas-guzzling vehicles to assuage angst (loneliness, inadequacy, fear); the show featured paintings of women seemingly seduced or pacified by their vehicles and a large painted-tile rendering of a Hummer (''Security''), accompanied by an ominous, almost subliminal soundtrack conceived with Chris Brown.Westbrook, Lindsey. "Johanna Poethig at Togonon Gallery," ''Artweek'', July 2007, p. 16. In the later shows "Positional Vertigo," "
Phyllotaxis In botany, phyllotaxis () or phyllotaxy is the arrangement of leaf, leaves on a plant stem. Phyllotactic spirals form a distinctive class of patterns in nature. Leaf arrangement The basic leaf#Arrangement on the stem, arrangements of leaves ...
and
Parastichy Parastichy, in phyllotaxy, is the spiral pattern of particular plant organs on some plants, such as areoles on cacti stems, florets in sunflower heads and scales in pine cones. These spirals involve the insertion of a single primordium. See al ...
in a Time of Love and War," and "Impossible Matter" (Mercury 20 Gallery, 2017–9), Poethig explored the innate search for the mystical in a culture of media overload, mathematical patterns in nature's terrestrial and extraterrestrial life systems, and alternative natural histories through spinning wheels of fortune, paintings, prints, sculpture costumes and props, and original texts.Frock, Christian L. "Positional Vertigo," ''San Francisco Chronicle'', 2017.Cheng, DeWitt. "Mixed Media, Mixed Messages at Mercury Twenty," ''East Bay Express'', November 2019.Frock, Christian L. "Jill McLennan, Johanna Poethig, Fernando Reyes," ''San Francisco Arts Chronicle Monthly'', November 2019.


Awards

Poethig has been recognized by the California Arts Council (1989, 1995, 1996),
Social and Public Art Resource Center The Social and Public Art Resource Center (SPARC or SPARCinLA) is a non-profit community arts center based in Venice, California. SPARC hosts exhibitions, sponsors workshops and murals, and lobbies for the preservation of Los Angeles area mural ...
(SPARC) in Los Angeles (1993 commission; Siqueiros Award, 2013), National Endowment for the Arts (1996), and Potrero Nuevo Fund Prize (1999), among others; her ceramic-and-paint mural ''Dragonfly'' won a San Francisco Beautification Award (2001).Snow, Shauna
"Murals,"
''Los Angeles Times'', December 20, 1992. Retrieved June 29, 2020.
SPARC
"Johanna Poethig returns to LA to digitally restore her iconic mural,"
July 20, 2016. Retrieved July 10, 2020.
''Public Art Review''. "Recent Projects," Fall-Winter 2003, p. 45. In 2021, she was awarded a California Arts Council Legacy Artist Fellowship.California Arts Council
"California Arts Council Announces 2021 Individual Artist Fellows,"
News. November 2, 2021. Retrieved November 11, 2021.
She has received artist residencies in Manila and Tbilisi (Georgia), and at the
Montalvo Arts Center The Montalvo Arts Center is a non-profit center for the arts in Saratoga, California, United States. Open to the public, Montalvo comprises a cultural and arts center, a park, hiking trails and the historic Villa Montalvo, an Italian Mediterran ...
and
Headlands Center for the Arts Headlands Center for the Arts hosts an internationally recognized artist-in-residence program, and interdisciplinary public programs. It is situated in a campus of artist-renovated military buildings in the Marin Headlands, in Marin County, Cali ...
, among others.Headlands Center for the Arts
"Johanna Poethig,"
Artists. Retrieved July 8, 2020.


References


External links


Johanna Poethig
official website

San Francisco Mural Arts
Johanna Poethig page
Public Art and Architecture from Around the World
Johanna Poethig
artist page, Mercury 20 Gallery
Johanna Poethig: Public artist
Mata ng Agila {{DEFAULTSORT:Poethig, Johanna 1956 births Living people 21st-century American artists American mixed-media artists Artists from Morristown, New Jersey Public art Artists from San Francisco University of California, Santa Cruz alumni Mills College alumni 21st-century American women painters 21st-century American painters