Poupee Boccaccio Enterprises

Theatrical Obsessions

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At The William D. Cannon Art Gallery
Sponsored by City of Carlsbad, CA. May - 2002

    The body seeks order - it cannot help it.  Chaos is unsettling, syncopated, unresolved.  Order sooths.  It unruffles, detangles, harmonizes.  Seal up the gaping holes, knots the loose ends. In what form of order, though, is there not some madness?  And in every chaos can one find some sense, some naturalness or reason, some reassuring balm?
          Chaos . . . . . . .   Order.
          Madness . . . . .   Brilliance.
          Fragility . . . . .  Strength.
          Chance . . . . . . .  Choice.
Within these dualities, Poupee Boccaccio locates a truth resonant with experience as she knows it.  A truth in the vacillation, in the simultaneity.  There is a restlessness to her work, an edgy yearning as layer surmounts layer, image crowds image.  But within the work there is also the grid, the sober alignment of verticals and horizontals.  Neat rows.  Regular repetitions.
Boccaccio does  not attempt to reconcile opposites as much as she defines a space where both can operate freely, where neither defeats the other but together they sustain an equilibrium, at once tense - and yet serene.
Over and over, the face of young, dark-eyed Catherine Boccaccio appears in these collages and shadowboxes.  She has a lovely, entrancing demeanor, whether dressed in a solemn white confirmation outfit or more playfully costumed as a gypsy or and angel.  Her face in these pictures is one her sister Poupee never knew - one of innocence , purity, promise.  By the time Poupee was born, Catherine was 15, and a hostage to the disease of schizophrenia.  Her hallucinations played themselves out in the bedroom that the girls shared.
    In the eyes of young Poupee, the trauma of Catherine's condition seemed to fuse with the drama of it.  Life itself assumed a fundamental theatricality.  Going into show business as a singer and actress felt, she says, like a natural extension of her childhood experiences.  Performing granted her another identity.  It transported her to a different place.  I allowed her to reinvent herself continually, to echo and to depart her sister.
              Madness . . . . . .  Brilliance.
              Chance . . . . . . .   Choice.
    In 1980, well-established with her own nightclub act and numerous film and television credits, Boccaccio opted to return to school, this time to study art.  (Her prior degree was in romance languages.)  At the Otis Art Institute of Parsons School  of Design  in  Los Angeles, she studied under Emerson Woelffer, Tom Wudl, Peter Shelton and Betye Saar, Saar's impact being the most pronounced and enduring.  Beginning as both a painter and an assemblage artist, her "love of materials won out," she says, and she has worked since in sculpture, collage and installation.  She has encased standing chess pieces - each one part angel, part house - in shimmering crusts of glass.  She has filled a case with an array of beetles, symbols of renewal, some iridescent, all grotesque and exquisite.  Like Saar, she gravitates toward objects charged with personal meaning, an textures defined by the use of the hand.
    Postage stamps from Italy, for instance, the country of her father's birth, line the interior of an assemblage piece called "The Ecuadorian Lottery for Mother Nature."  One side of the open case is papered with letters her father wrote, the Italian stamps, and Mexico loteria cards with images of skulls and hearts.  On the other side of the case is a crudely fashioned torso of a woman, inset with green beetles and coiled  in copper wire.  On her abdomen rests a small roulette wheel.  Nail and pins pierce her heart.  The suitcase Boccaccio used to contain these objects and memories is the very one carried by her father to Ecuador, where he met her mother, and together they had Catherine.
    Catherine's face doesn't appear here as it does in so many other works, but her presence, whether explicit or implicit, suffuses Boccaccio's aesthetic.  To try to make sense of Catherine's condition, their mother sought guidance in palmistry and astrology.  Their father turned to the traditions of Catholicism.  Boccaccio extracts symbols from both of these modes of understanding reality - and others - and interlaces them in her work.  Palmistry diagrams overlap with crosses, evil eyes hover around tiny milagros, knelt in prayer.  What drives each of these beliefs and practices is the craving for order - a sensible explanation, a system that might provide structure within the chaos, and indicator to deflect the fear that only chance, free of method, might be steering.
    Everything, though, in a world of dualities, contains its opposite.  Randomness does yield patterns.  Systems do yield to luck.  These are not just discrete objects that Boccaccio fashions, but microcosms of her world, the world at large, where games and magic coexist with rational causality.  Boccaccio immerses us in it.  Within her densely layered collages and assemblages, the surfaces covered edge to edge, symbols of play (tic tac toe grids and hopscotch squares) overlap with numerical patterns and emblems of good fortune (a tooth, a wishbone).  The different fields o inquiry compete for attention in the clamor.  Varying modes if action co-conspire.
    "Ritual, magic, theater and religion are difficult to distinguish from each other - they are all landmarks people use to find their bearing in a chaotic universe,"  Boccaccio has written.  The layering of symbol upon symbol "is a metaphor for each person's struggle towards his own personal truth."
    Many years ago, when moving Catherine into a nursing facility, Poupee came across years' worth of notebooks  her sister had compiled, each containing page after page of numerical sequences.  Perhaps the number represented mathematical equations, perhaps a private code.  Maybe they were simply a form of babbling, on paper - but maybe not.  Some  hint of brilliance lurked within the madness of the ritualistic repetition, and for Boccaccio, the notebooks became emblematic of more than just her sister's condition. They rhythmically echo my own obsessiveness as an artist, and nature's repetitive but waning heartbeat, and man's destructive countdown in the name of progress," she wrote in the statement for one of her shows.
    For the installation, "La Juala (The Cage)," Boccaccio recreated Catherine's bedroom, using Xeroxed pages from the notebooks to sheathe every surface - the walls, floor, dresser, rocking horse, doll.  Even the bedding bears those strings of numbers, running across reproductions of Catherine's face.  Though the space us a sterile white, the room feels out of control, buzzing with manic energy.  The patterning overwhelms, offering no respite.  It entraps, like a cage.  Coinciding with this is the still harmony of Boccaccio's shadowbox cases that pair photographs of Catherine with rows of butterflies.  A contained order reigns here, a sense of balance, correspondence.  Meticulously structured reliquaries, the cases contain black and white photo transparencies of Catherine (ever in costume)  in tight, even rows on one side, and an equally careful alignment of butterfly specimens on the other, all against the background of those numbers, endless streaming.  The delicacy of both the girl and the butterflies registers immediately, reinforced by their common translucency, which gives them both a fragile, almost ephemeral quality.  Both, though, possess an obvious tenacity.  The pairing is utterly--each is a rare and endangered beauty, frozen in prime.
    Poupee Boccaccio practices an obsessive magic, summoning beauty from pain, transcendence from things earthly and physical.  When art works, she says, it's like a séance.  It's a form of passage from one place to another, out of one identity and into another.  It's theater, a ruthless drama and an indulgent fantasy, set with the artifacts of experience.  And it's everyday life, which is theater at its best and most mysterious.

Written by: Leah Ollman (Los Angeles Times) for Theatrical Obsessions.

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