I faced this choice with Making the Voters Chicken. I was not satisfied with the work when I first completed it, but I wasn’t sure what was wrong. It featured two chickens attempting to vote at city hall. One was an ungainly brown rooster; the other, a charming, fluffy yellow hen.
I tried to cram as many ideas about voter suppression and the manipulation of election laws into the sculpture as I could. And that was the problem. The ideas were not clearly expressed and were piled on top of each other. So, I put the work aside for a time. When I returned to it two years later, I was ready to rip it apart.
Reusing elements of the original sculpture
I started with the yellow hen. Her feathery body was a combination of loopy yellow mohair bouclé yarn and a smooth variegated gold and brown merino wool yarn. I used a stitch pattern called Loose Woven Cables from the Harmony Guide to 440 More Knitting Stitches. The pattern creates crisscrossing diagonal lines, mixing the colors and textures into a soft puffy cloud of feathers.
The next feature I reused was the city hall edifice. The most important part of this element is the clock, set at 10 minutes to four. Alongside the building is a sign that reads: POLLS closing 4 PM. That’s a very early hour to close. Shortening polling hours, relocating polling stations, and spreading misinformation about both have historically been used to confuse voters and suppress the vote in certain places. These tactics are back in vogue in places like Texas and elsewhere. The result is long lines of chickens waiting to vote.
Making new elements to elaborate on the theme
So, you might ask, where is the ballot in all of this? That precious treasure that enables citizens to choose their representatives floats high above the bird, out of reach.
At the time of this writing, there is a fourth sculpture in this set in progress. It will house a fox, looking over the henhouse. You’ll see him in a future post.
See more of my bird sculptures here as well as my work about democracy and society.
There is something so right about the process you’ve gone through: a first sculpture that ultimately “misrepresented” what you thought your message was, and a second sculpture that literally “boxes” the issues, representing the compartmentalization happening around voters’ rights. This was a delight to read and to see the steps along the way. Can’t wait to see this in an exhibition!
What great observations, Beth! I hadn’t thought about the process of reworking the sculpture as ITSELF a metaphor for what the country is going through. Thank you!
Amazing process such detail great effort very fun
How will she make the fox!!!
Thanks, Melinde. You’ll see the fox soon!
Your process makes me think of something I have come across in my collage work….a Kolaj fest event in 2019 in New Orleans which was titled “Cultural Deconstructions” in which the participants are actually doing their art by taking images apart and rejoining them, except in your case one of the things being taken apart is cultural norms, and abnorms! Fascinating I look forward to how you will make the fox………!! Amazing effort. truly.
I love these chickens!
What a fabulous series, Eve! Brava! I particularly love the solo hen or rooster with lowered head, who to me looks quite perplexed by the long list of requirements to vote.
Yay, I’m so glad you thought the brown hen looks perplexed, Joyce! Thank you.
Charming, funny, painful. I am eagerly and with some trepidation awaiting the arrival of the fox. Thank you, Eve. I hope that lots of people get to see this series.
Jan, I’m so glad all those feelings came through. I’m working on the fox head now, hoping to make it slightly menacing.
Sometimes you just have to bite the bullet. Great job Eve, & the chickens look terrific! Congrats on being included in the upcoming book, too.
Thanks, Betsy. I had to sit with the piece for awhile before I was ready to take it apart, but I’m glad I did.
So enjoy seeing the evolution of this series, Eve. The topic is close to my heart, as, by the way, are chickens! Love seeing your process and hearing your thoughts.
Thanks, Nel!