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Bonnie Lucas
Girl with Purse
June 26 – August 21, 2022
Opening reception: Sunday, June 26, 3–6pm
Following the opening, gallery hours are available by appointment only.
Please contact thewaves@ruschwoman.blue to make arrangements
to visit RUSCHWOMAN during the run of the exhibition.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, Installation View, RUSCHWOMAN, June 2022
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Behind skeletal trees of tiny leaves a man leaves, he is totally
white, shakes a fist at nothing, pisses on the tiny white garden
stones, oh I am lonely, again departs, precautionarily walking
around this lawn … another man rises, totally red-faced, his lips
are rosy and soft as a baby’s, he had me when I was encased in
prison. I am not. Thousands of fuchsias surrounded me: ivy, soot,
gook made out of begonia petals by her nervous fingers because
they know they’re almost out-of-existence like the marks of
hopscotch on a bombed-out street. The man I know is getting near
me but now there are detours, this is a miniature golf course …
and another man sticks his leg through the window, bewildered
face like a lunatic’s, palms vertically flat beat the air, froth comes
from his mouth.
‘Bastards. They’ve stolen me.’
–Kathy Acker. from “Translations of the Diaries of
Laure the Schoolgirl.” (1983) Essential Acker.
New York: Grove Press, 2002. Print, p. 175.
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For over forty years, Bonnie Lucas has been constructing a beyond-the-pale through-the-looking-glass
realm populated by enforced tropes of femininity exaggerated to be their most perverse and decorated
with glimmering, magpie-like trappings of runaway rampant, mass-produced globalized consumption.
RUSCHWOMAN is humbled, honored, and deeply pleased to present a rarely before seen yet key body of low
relief wall sculptures the artist produced in 2006 and 2007. Each found portal composite is filled to
overflowing with vestigial trappings of Lucas’ lifetime of collecting; the artist is revealed, in a sense,
to be a Bo Peep who sheperdesses a shopped vocabulary of seeming rococo frivolity into a mindful mission
of earnestness and absolute care.
Lucas’ appreciation for her assemblies of talismanic feminine figurines is expressed through her rescue of
them from the nonchalant sense of disposability of sales bins, notions sections, and clearance racks.
The artist’s affection directs her to gather these ornaments and oddities into an alternative value system
that reconsiders a thing’s worth. But the adoration Lucas reserves for her objet is legible most of all
through her repurposing—a necessary detachment from their intended uses wherein Lucas forces form and meaning
open through a dismembering that combines a Destroy-She-Said-Marguerite-Duras capacity for joy with an elusive
notion Freud observed in his 1919 essay “A Child Is Being Beaten,” that within certain violent fantasies the
being beaten also stands for being loved.
These topsy-turvy, twisted love-fueled recovery efforts serve as antidotal counterpoints to the already everywhere
means by which hatred for a woman and her body is continually signaled within a cultural marketplace stocked with
tropes of gender but also their intersections with taxonomies of sexuality, class, age (of consent, of
obsolescence, of expiration), relative autonomy, and the stagnant fairytale of a racialized whiteness circulated
by our age’s most powerful storytelling apparatuses (Disney, et al). Among other oddities, to wit: plastic dolls,
porcelain figurines, rag dolls, ringlets of glossy acrylic hair, dissociative mile long stares caught in an icy
blue eye fringed in a drag queen’s improbably long lashes, costume jewelry, christening gowns, baby clothes,
lingerie, underwear, sewing kits, miniature stiletto heels, plush toy animals, silk flowers, machine lace doilies,
yarn, Japanime, something phallic, something old, and something new.
Lucas aggregates a pasture of pastel pinks that range from blush to bashful, confectionary, youthful, romantic,
and demurely flushed. Sickly, radioactive greens—the unnatural growth of astroturfs, artificial pistachio flavoring,
artificial mint flavoring, artificial matcha flavoring, the preponderance of fluorescent green goops as a science
fiction trope—compliment, a formal allusion to the brisk violences that are everywhere suggested in Lucas’ oeuvre.
Lucas’ cut-and-paste psycho-erotics proceeds from the legacies of women-fixated Surrealists who emphasized the
unlikely assemblage of gender as a process. Her constructions share a rapport with the jumbled accretions into
which the confessional is secreted in mélanges of pop cultural detritus made by early-adopters of collage as a
strategy including Baroness Elsa von Freytag-Loringhoven, Meret Oppenheim, Carol Rama, and Eileen Agar. These
lady pioneers not only disrupted the pervasiveness of a male gaze as the burgeoning art world’s de facto point
of view, but went so far as to question the stability of binarisms or inherent traits that are presumed in that
predictable mode of looking. As with these artists before her, Bonnie Lucas addresses the state of fragmentation
and shimmering elusiveness of the Surreal female subject as she appears in, say, the reveries of Paul Delvaux or
in Magritte’s deconstructed female nude The Eternally Obvious, 1930, or Shéhérazade the recurrent disembodied
facial features trimmed in pearls. While sharing traits of deliberate brokenness and ornamental excess, Lucas
consistently brings a literal and psychological depth to her densely layered doll parts and textile accoutrement.
Lucas’ work achieved maturity in the late 1970s in step with the legitimacy gained by a generation of New York
artists who reclaimed sewing, fiber, and other material techniques historically relegated to women through their
recontextualization in post modern developments like third wave feminism and a critique of capital that anticipated
Reagan and his subsequent lackeys, pitting the tenderly handmade against mass production and even more immaterial
economies of goods and services. And yet the Bad Seed stylings of her impish worry dolls and worldly Lolitas have
been found obscene even in the populations at the margins. As her surrounding society struggled to reckon with
demands for a total divestment from the conventionally feminine all the while measuring what is retained aesthetically,
ontologically, and politically in the project of women’s empowerment, Lucas playfully persisted in her flirtations
with girlish, coquettish deviance. In subsequent decades the pressures of her stand off with regulated female
comportments have pushed through phalanx clichés into an expanded language of figuration: a mutant-monster
pleasure-ravenous vector of plant, animal, baby doll, and supremely Id crystalline facets.
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Twirrly – whirrly – green-gem-studded-deep miriardbreasted –
spume milk laced – carbonpaper – tinsel – tinfoil tinted –
frothknit – crochet – scallop filigree – galloping – stamping
horse –
Race glass sea – agog! Boundless – abounding –
Gog – agog! Cradle beloved bronzed – steel orb adventure!
Tall salt sea mate sweetheart – silver arrow beflitt by
Rocking – dipping carmine eyed – beaked – tied –gulls –
Bride – beauty gala – galore – – –
Pearl mother Aprhodite’s
Diamond nostrils ejaculate
Brilliant carouse!
Mine – thine –
To home!
–Baroness Elsa von Freytag Loringhoven. “To Home.”
Body Sweats: The Uncensored Writings of Elsa von Freytag
Loringhoven. Cambridge: Massachusetts Institute of Technology,
2011. Print, p. 185.
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Please find me a thread near the river
a ribbon for my throat
Is this hope in my cup or a sock?
This would be Red.
Incessantly stripped world must I enter
your chamber/I live in the morning’s attic
Am I poor or wise?
Am I awake?
Am I bride or nun?
What is fun?
I know I am strange and fake
Must I go to the spot where the man is?
I’d rather not
This would be White
–Ann Lauterbach. “A Clown, Some Colors, a Doll, Her Stories, a
Song, a Moonlit Cove.” If in Time: Selected Poems 1975–2000.
New York: Penguin Books, 2001. Print, p. 53.
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“The prettiest in-crowd that you had ever seen /
Ribbons in our hair, and our eyes gleamed mean /
A freshmen generation of degenerate beauty queens….”
–Lana Del Rey. “This Is What Makes Us Girls.” Born to Die.
Interscope Records, 2012
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Several months into the disarray brought into the world with the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic, Will Heinrich
interviewed Lucas for the New York Times, mapping the ways she responds to the difficulties in the world through
her complex material strategies. In their conversation, Lucas observed, “You know, this is a little tool for
sewing [pointing to a needle], but made useless — it’s too small. But I feel like, by poking and spearing, I’m
using it in a clever and wonderful way that emotionally is very rewarding to me. It’s tiny and strange and mildly
violent to pierce things. Especially things that are so feminine, so loaded with prettiness…I’m yearning to make
a small, beautiful universe that’s filled with the reality of the times — which is that things are dismembered
and cut up. Because what’s going on outside is so scary and dark and worrisome, my little universe will reflect
all that.”
Read the full article here.
Compounded in Bonnie’s bricolage arrangements are pointed characterizations aplenty that punch holes through
romantically conservative narratives of girls maturing quietly into compliant women. Sweet and nasty, Lucas
mines the potential for a contrary capacity for resistance on her own terms amidst anxious compilations of high
femme performances as they’ve been remembered in toys and tchotchke. Barbies and cartoon princesses, emancipated
Britney shopping at Target, next-gen gender-flex JoJo Siwa, femme queen ballroom categories, puckering Lana Del
Rey, fae Cara Delevingne, Bratz dolls and Lizzo’s big Grrrls, the ladylike, razor sharp battling of Barbara
Cartland and Jackie Collins, Eve and Villanelle—the latter clad in a voluminous Molly Goddard gown in hot pink
tulle—it girls of the so-called “dirtbag left” Anna Khachiyan and Dasha Nekrasova, Charli D’Amelio and her
coterie of tiktok influencers, Poppy: these and more anecdotal positions within or adjacent to white feminism
are all brought under the sway of Lucas’ inquiries into the how and why such standpoints have been maintained
in our civilization.
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The city I dreamt of: it was here that I heard the voice of Mary the
Whore Who Gave Her All For Love, here I stared at the beautiful
look of Violette injected by the blackest ink, here finally Justus and
Betelgeuse, Verax and Hair and all the girls with the names of the
stars the openings of doors magnetized the young girls. They no
longer know what they’re doing. Invisible rays make this
nothingness where everything is possible, possible.
Anonymity by imposing no image reveals space.
This is the beginning of love. For you it’s of no importance but for
me it has every importance.
You also said: ‘You don’t understand why I’m bothering with you
because I have so much to give and you have nothing to give.’
I’m not bothering with you now.
–Kathy Acker. ”Diaries of Laure the Schoolgirl.” (1983) P. 178.
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Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, 2007, detail view
Mixed media sculpture, 12h x 13.5w x 6.5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, 2007, detail view
Mixed media sculpture, 12h x 13.5w x 6.5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Red Hair, 2007, detail view
Mixed media sculpture, 12h x 11w x 5d in.
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Bonnie Lucas was born in 1950 in Syracuse, New York. She completed a B.A. in Art History from Wellesley College
and an MFA from Rutgers University. In the decades that have followed, her work has been exhibited throughout the
United States (New York, Cambridge, Boston, Baltimore, Chicago, Cleveland, Minneapolis, Oakland) and abroad
(Netherlands, Finland, Japan, Taiwan, South Korea, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia). In the 1980s, she
presented a series of solo exhibitions with the Avenue B Gallery in New York. Her work has been included in projects
at the Drawing Center, the International Studio Curatorial Program, Sideshow Gallery, the Painting Center, Art in
General, the DeCordova Museum, the Dutch Textile Museum, and Bellevue Art Museum among other institutions. In 2011
Lucas was interviewed by MSNBC.com, and her work has been written about in Artforum, ARTnews, The New York Times,
The Village Voice, The New Yorker, and USA Today. In 2014 her work was the subject of a survey exhibition at
Sylvia Wald and Po Kim Gallery, an artist-run space in New York. Following on this extensive survey, Lucas
presented solo exhibitions at JTT in 2017 and 17ESSEX in 2018. Lucas lives and works in New York City.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas, Sweetness, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 12h x 12w x 5 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Sweetness, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 12h x 12w x 5 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Sweetness, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 12h x 12w x 5 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Sweetness, 2007, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Sweetness, 2007, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with a Rose, 2006, Mixed media sculpture, 12 1/2h x 13 1/2w x 6 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with a Rose, 2006, Mixed media sculpture, 12 1/2h x 13 1/2w x 6 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with a Rose, 2006, Mixed media sculpture, 12 1/2h x 13 1/2w x 6 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with a Rose, 2006, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with a Rose, 2006, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with a Rose, 2006, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Tiger, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 11h x 11w x 5 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Tiger, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 11h x 11w x 5 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Tiger, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 11h x 11w x 5 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Tiger, 2007, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Tiger, 2007, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Some Friends, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 13 1/2h x 12w x 7d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Some Friends, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 13 1/2h x 12w x 7d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Some Friends, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 13 1/2h x 12w x 7d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Some Friends, 2007, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Some Friends, 2007, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas, Happy Together, 2006, Mixed media sculpture, 13h x 12w x 5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Happy Together, 2006, Mixed media sculpture, 13h x 12w x 5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Happy Together, 2006, Mixed media sculpture, 13h x 12w x 5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Happy Together, 2006, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Happy Together, 2006, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Red Hair, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 12h x 11w x 5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Red Hair, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 12h x 11w x 5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Red Hair, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 12h x 11w x 5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Red Hair, 2007, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Red Hair, 2007, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Ducks, 2006, Mixed media sculpture, 12 1/2h x 11 1/2w x 4 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Ducks, 2006, Mixed media sculpture, 12 1/2h x 11 1/2w x 4 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Ducks, 2006, Mixed media sculpture, 12 1/2h x 11 1/2w x 4 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Ducks, 2006, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Ducks, 2006, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, Installation View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl in Green Dress, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 13h x 11w x 5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl in Green Dress, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 13h x 11w x 5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl in Green Dress, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 13h x 11w x 5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl in Green Dress, 2007, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 12h x 13 1/2w x 6 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 12h x 13 1/2w x 6 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, 2007, Mixed media sculpture, 12h x 13 1/2w x 6 1/2d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, 2007, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, 2007, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Ballerina, 2006, Mixed media sculpture, 11 1/2h x 11w x 5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Ballerina, 2006, Mixed media sculpture, 11 1/2h x 11w x 5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Ballerina, 2006, Mixed media sculpture, 11 1/2h x 11w x 5d in.
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Ballerina, 2006, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Ballerina, 2006, Detail View
Bonnie Lucas, Girl with Purse, Installation View