Artist Statement/Marjorie Moore
Baghdad Boxes/Sanctuaries
Each morning I sit down in my lovely porch with fresh fruit, wholesome toast, and fragrant tea. I open the New York Times and the day begins. The juxtaposition of reading about the war in Iraq and my personal surroundings are very difficult to reconcile. Like many of us in this place of reasonable security, I read, I become angry, I feel helpless, I cry.
The parts of birds, maimed by vehicles, or cats, or mishap, I have collected and placed in my studio for sometime. I watch them decompose, I finger the matted feathers and the lightest of bones. I am entranced by their delicacy and their vulnerability.
One day, some months ago I began to sew these parts onto fabric with beads and little stitches. I was thinking about Victorian hair art, an act of using hair from the dead in unique and exquisite designs to memorialize the lost loved one. I wanted to make these bones and feathers beautiful again, a kind of reliquary for the loss of flight and freedom.
It took me some time to understand that what I was doing was about the war. It could be, of course, about all war, but the horror and plight of American troops and the citizens of Iraq are so prevalent, so in our lives every day, that I was compelled to somehow make these pieces about this particular war.
And so I placed text, garnered from the articles in the New York Times that I read every morning, into the little drawers of the bejeweled boxes. In the sanctuary table pieces the drawers contain the remains of found birds bathed in salt. We all compartmentalize our feelings so that we may go on with the day; I leave my porch and fold up the newspaper. In this light I have given the viewer the choice to close the drawers and close the emotions the text or remains evoke.
I cannot suggest that these works will change anything
or that I am making political art. I can only say that making these objects
has been a meditative process for me and has at some level allowed a small sense
of peace in my life. Perhaps it will give that same small gift to you as well.