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"Raggedy Andy assists artist's mind cleansing"
http://the.honoluluadvertiser.com/article/2003/Sep/07/il/il16a.html
Honolulu Advertiser, Sunday September 7, 2003
By Victoria Gail-White
Advertiser Art Critic
In a series of acrylic and oil paintings based on "working" through the
emotional labors of past incidents that filter into our present life,
Ginger Royal gives Raggedy Andy a good scrub. In her exhibit at The Gallery
on the Pali, Andy also gets vacuumed, ironed and tumble-dried.
Royal began the series before graduating from the bachelor of fine arts
program at the University of Hawai'i-Manoa.
As a child Royal didn't play with dolls. Originally, she bought the Raggedy
Andy doll as a gift, but its talent as a model precluded her giving it
away. In this series, Royal, as an adult, is "Cleaning House with Raggedy
Andy," a metaphor for the process of mentally cleaning up one's mind
instead of one's house.
She chose Andy rather than the Ann doll because she felt it gave her
concept gender balance and more angst.
"Raggedy Andy provides (through a doll's non-threatening anthropomorphic
qualities) the psychological and emotional witness of one's personal
process of this internal cleansing," she writes in her artist statement.
The 14 paintings display Royal's various painting styles using a palette
knife and a brush, and illustrate the resolved and unresolved conflicts she
explores.
"Once Upon a Line" shows Andy hanging on a clothesline with other articles
of clothing in a sunny yard, while in "Ironing It All Out" he is on his
back on an ironing board with an dark oversized iron beside him. In
"Censored" Raggedy Andy is intentionally gooey-mouthed and muted at
bedside, without any clear spatial definitions. However, the psychological
themes of this series do begin to take shape.
"The titles say a lot about the mental processes I am going through," Royal
says. "Whenever I had a project or something due, I would go into my room,
fold everything and make it neat. I thought I was a procrastinator. I
realized now that it was healing — allowing me to clear my mind and give me
space to work so that I could focus on the project with full intention and
diligence."
"These pieces are about giving oneself the space to let go, knowing when to
purge, and the processing which provides the balance necessary in
redistributing past experiences," Royal wrote.
For details about the artist and her work, visit her Web site at
www.gingerroyal.com.
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