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On research, activities and reviews from the ESFL community
Not Leaving the Essential Workers Behind: The Work of Artist Carolyn S. Olson
A review from Jim McKenzie
The word “portrait” suggests the image of an individual, usually a prominent woman or man–persons of some historical, political, or social renown: bodies, busts, or faces suitable for inclusion on currency or ornately framed in galleries. Carolyn S. Olson’s latest work, 100 profoundly engaging, colorful pastels collected in a catalogue, Essential Worker Portraits, is anything but that.
Her subjects are first and foremost workers. No fewer than 44 of these 100 paintings use the word in their titles. An early portrait, #5 (from March, 2020, beginning pandemic time) unites “Doctors, Nurses, and Janitor” under that root word connecting them all: “Hospital Workers.” There are no euphemisms in Olson’s titles; no name-tag abstractions either—“sales associate,” “team member,” or other all too familiar, undignifying corporate jargon.
Upcoming Events Nov. 6: Essential Workers (Artist-Activist Conversation)—Exhibit Opening at ESFL with Carolyn Olson in conversation with Keith Christensen on Zoom at 1 p.m. Nov. 13: Essential Workers Panel Discussion on Zoom at 1 p.m. |
Essential workers, a term bred by the pandemic itself, deliver what matters most for the ongoing comforting and indeed essential flow of our lives: food, health, safety, sanitation, transportation, basic utilities, much of it visible on the humble city streets of Olson’s world. She shows us “School Food Service Workers,” “Sanitation Workers,” “Warehouse Workers,” a “Laundromat Worker,”—so many fellow citizens whose work the pandemic forced us to recognize is essential. Some even took to calling them heroes, and temporarily paid a little more for their labor.
Her subject selections and even her titles for paintings invite viewers to consider more deeply the unfinished work of democracy. Portrait #7 shows masked “First Responders,” loading an eyes-shut patient on a respirator into an ambulance. “Pieta of the Uninsured,” her subtitle reads, combining sacred Christian imagery with a still gaping hole in our healthcare “system.” A few portraits later we encounter “Election Judges.” One unrolls red “I Voted” circles near a hijab-wearing voter. Their shape and color alone signal their purpose; there are no words. Olson weighs words carefully, rarely using them in her portraits themselves. So when we see words on paintings, they carry more weight.
Several portraits after “Election Judges” we encounter another kind of work essential for democracy, the peaceable assemblage for redress of grievances. In this case, a piece called “Protesters,” the occasion is the police murder of George Floyd. Most prominent, bottom left, are three marchers carrying a “UNITY” banner. Other signs read “BLACK LIVES MATTER,” “No Justice No Peace,” “MMIW” for Murdered and Missing Indian Women. A red hand streams across the mask of the protester carrying that placard, suggesting bloody efforts to silence even her mention of such violence.
Later still, Portrait #28, we see an image showing another important feature of democracy, solidarity across what sometimes seem isolated interest groups. Only ten of Olson’s portraits feature a solitary worker, but this one has the most people—27, all masked, some also wearing face shields above their hospital blues. Two raise white-gloved fists, another extends two arms in a V above her head, hoisting aloft her NURSES AGAINST RACISM sign. But a banner held by four protesters, “WHITE COATS 4 BLACK LIVES,” Olson’s title for the piece, stretches across the entire portrait. A single medical worker at the very edge is neither behind nor in front of the banner, though she holds her own placard.
Carolyn Olson refers to herself as a narrative painter, a useful description both for individual works and Essential Worker Portraits as a whole. The book follows the strong, familiar-to-all-of-us-narrative arc of the pandemic. The collection’s last page sequences her paintings by the month they were created, March 2020 through July 2021. The cover enlarges a detail from the book’s first image, “Grocery Store Cashiers and Baggers,” surely one of the earliest “essential” workers ordinary Americans encountered during the disruptions of those early times. Spring and early summer 2020 portraits feature numerous spray bottles. Two pieces use the phrase “Disinfection Worker” in their titles, a work category much harder to imagine before that time, and an activity that became less prominent as scientists learned the most prevalent way the virus spread.
A year later, Olson’s narrative gives us that lift so many felt, briefly, before it got sucked into polarized political confrontation: vaccinations. First (January 2021) we see a nurse injecting a doctor, both women; then, in a succession that mirrors society’s priorities, Grocery Store Worker, Teachers, and Bus Drivers; finally, last in this particular subject run—more than a month later (April)–shoppers in a mall.
Though Olson works out of Duluth, and the reference to George Floyd protests suggest strong Twin Cities connections, it’s important to remember that Floyd’s murder, like the pandemic, stirred humanity everywhere. Wikipedia required 67 pages just to enumerate and describe the protests around the world that lead to changes in existing public art and monuments. The PBS News Hour’s Jeffrey Brown (June 17, 2020) used Olson’s early work to anchor a closing segment on a variety of artist responses to the Covid-19 pandemic.
Thanks to Olson and the East Side Freedom Library, we bring this narrative back home. On Sunday, November 6, at 1 p.m., ESFL will host Essential Workers (Artist-Activist Conversation) which will open an exhibit of her work and feature a conversation between her and artist Keith Christensen. The following Sunday, November 13, ESFL will host Essential Workers Panel Discussion, also at 1 p.m. Both events will be virtual and accessible on Zoom.
The East Side Freedom Library would love to share your story about what it means to live during this pandemic. Please click 'Submit a Blog or Book Geek Shelf Talker' above to send your story.
Changing the Narrative
Sisters, Brothers, and Kin, "Sticks and stones can break my bones, but words can never hurt me." How many of us heard this from parents and teachers as we were growing up? They may have thought they were giving us good advice, but experience reveals what a bum steer...
Putting Our Learning to Work: New Approaches to Programs at ESFL
Dear Sisters, Brothers, and Kin, This June marks our seventh year of operation! It also marks the beginning of a new chapter in our history, as we move towards hybrid and in-person programming. Given the rates of vaccination, the declining numbers of infections,...
Intersections at the East Side Freedom Library: More than Where Greenbrier Meets Jessamine
Sisters, Brothers, and Kin, The pandemic, police murders of people of color, and the uprising of an invigorated movement against white supremacy have inspired us to bring more intentionality to our longstanding commitment to work at intersections: between our...
Spring Forward with ESFL!
Sisters, Brothers, and Kin, May 2021 marks the 15th month of this pandemic! It has been a challenging time for all of us, particularly those long disadvantaged by the deep inequities which have been produced and reproduced throughout American history. The East Side...
Book Geek Shelf Talker: Borders, Families, Homes
By Mary Turck
A “red-and-white-polka-dotted Minnie Mouse dress” stands for Soraya Membreno’s experience in attending a small, elite liberal arts college, as an immigrant from a non-upper-class background. She chooses this dress for graduation, and then sees all of her classmates in “a very specific kind of dress, a white or cream-colored or pale pastel shift, simple and strapless.”
Her mother cannot get a visa to come from Nicaragua for Membreno’s graduation. Her father manages to attend but looks as out of place as she feels.
“Somewhere along the line, in the flurry of niceties and ceremonies, with my father relegated to the sidelines of my peripheral vision, that weekend made clear the very thing I had been denying for the past four years: I was being subsumed by something else, going to a place where my family could not follow. I stood out like hell, a polka-dotted dress in a sea of white, but there I was, still in it. Still part of it. And he could do no more than snap a picture.” A Map Is Only One Story: Twenty writers on immigration, family, and the meaning of home. Edited by Nicole Chung and Mensa Demary. Catapult, 2020.
Membreno is one of twenty immigrant writers in A Map Is Only One Story: Twenty Writers on Immigration, Family, and the Meaning of Home (Edited by Nicole Chung and Mensa Demary. Catapult, 2020). They do not tell coming-to-America stories, but rather deeply personal stories: crossing the India-Pakistan border at partition and 60 years later, haircuts and Miyazaki heroines, and growing up on both sides of the border in El Paso/Ciudad Juárez.
These twenty stories, in twenty voices, raise many of the same ethical issues of connection and separation, unjust social structures, and individual responsibility and possibility as philosopher Jennifer Morton’s Moving Up without Losing Your Way (Princeton University Press, 2019.)
Both books, in their different ways, do the work that Morton describes as “think[ing] more critically and reflectively about the broader social, political, and economic context of both one’s adopted country and one’s home, and how one might play a role in changing them for the better.”
Mary Turck is a freelance writer and editor and teaches writing and journalism at Metropolitan State University and Macalester College. She pens the News Day, Immigration News and Community Journalism blogs. She is also the former editor of the TC Daily Planet and of the award-winning Connection to the Americas and AMERICAS.ORG, a recovering attorney, and the author of many books for young people (and a few for adults), mostly focusing on historical and social issues.
Find Your Book!
Need to get your hands on a good book while doing your work to shelter in place? The library is closed in a response of solidarity amid the COVID-19 crisis, but here are some places where you can get your hands on all the great titles. Shop independent bookstores!
Black Garnet Books: https://www.blackgarnetbooks.com
Boneshaker Books: https://www.boneshakerbooks.com/
Dream Haven Books and Comics: http://dreamhavenbooks.com/
Eat My Words: http://www.eatmywordsbooks.com/
Irreverent Bookworm: https://irrevbooks.com/
Magers & Quinn: https://www.magersandquinn.com/
Mayday Books: http://maydaybookstore.org/
Moon Palace Books: https://www.moonpalacebooks.com/
Next Chapter Booksellers: https://www.nextchapterbooksellers.com/
SubText Books: https://subtextbooks.com/books
The Red Balloon Bookshop: https://www.redballoonbookshop.com/
Wild Rumpus: https://www.wildrumpusbooks.com/
Or you could even consider the amazing Powell's in Portland: https://www.powells.com/; Book Shop, https://bookshop.org/; AbeBooks https://www.abebooks.com/; or Indie Bound, https://www.indiebound.org/
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Please email your blogs or Book Geek Shelf Talkers to Clarence White at [email protected].
Book Geek Shelf Talkers: Provide two or three paragraphs about the book and why the thoughts inside are important for you. How might they be important for us, especially in these days when we need to inspire more solidarity than ever?