Saturday, April 23, 2022

Notes In Time

On those rare occasions when a trip to the city includes a visit to an art museum, I've learned to take what is offered me in those echoing galleries as a gift. I unwrap that gift slowly, expecting only that the artists' works will surprise and delight and challenge me.  

Nancy Spero's "Notes In Time"
Museum of Modern Art, New York City

And thus it was Nancy Spero's "Notes In Time" grabbed my attention, stopped me and continues to wind its way into my thought weeks later.

The artist was from my parents' generation. She was in her late 40s when she created this massive work in the 1970s. At that time, I was a young woman, a young woman who, even then, resented being referred to as a girl.

As a female child in the 1950s and 1960s, I carried with me all of the expectations of being female in those times. Even the high school guidance counselor (a man, of course) suggested to me that a girl should choose something like secretarial work, nursing or teaching - something to get you through until you married.or to fall back on if, God forbid, your husband were to die.

I'm the young woman who went off to nursing school after high school, the old-fashioned kind based in a hospital. It was made very clear from the very first day we sat in the classroom in our starched blue and white uniforms that the nurse's role was to be "handmaid" to the doctor - and the doctors were, of course, all men. Did we really have to stand up every time a doctor came into the room? It was my first hint that perhaps Guidance Counselor Patterson had steered me in the wrong direction.


Spero has described "Notes In Time" as shocking. And to me, indeed it is. Shocking to see the images scattered across the panels and read the words. But she also describes it as celebratory. And to me, indeed it is also a celebration - a celebration of the opportunities that unfold for women today and, at the same time, a celebration of women who refused to be imprisoned in the constraints of society in their times.

My mother first went to work outside the home when I was well into elementary school. We were a large family and living on the income of my father's six-day-a-week job in addition to odd jobs he took in his spare time, became impossible. Watching my mother going to work every day in a man's world as a linotype operator, I assumed that she got that job only because her father and brother owned the newspaper. 

But when did I learn that my mother was, instead of the stereotype of the boss's daughter, a competent, hard-working, respected part of a team? That she stood side-by-side with those guys in their ink-stained Carhartt's and donned her own printer's apron. She sat in front of the towering linotype for hours at a time, her fingers flying across the keys, then depressing the casting lever that would result in a hot line of type coming down the chute into the tray. She made the transition from letterpress to offset printing. She managed the mailing list and the weekly distribution of the press run. She was even given the title to match her skills -  Mechanical Superintendent. And, indeed, she was my role model as I became the next boss's daughter at the newspaper after walking away from nursing school.




2 comments:

Steven J said...

1965 Rosalie Lawrence told me and Ron Thomas that big changes were coming We agreed. She had started her "NOW Foundation" which spoke of confinement of gender roles and where freedom might lie. She asked me a lot of questions I did not have good answers for, including about the role of art and artists. She espoused the therapies of Wilhelm Reich, which will probably one day be vindicated. I do not know what connection there was or was not between Rosalie's Foundation and the soon-to-be founded National Organization for Women. It's still not documented. But her intuitions were correct. Many years later I heard much the same message from Paul Ehrlich - "The way to fix the world is to empower women," and I have seen it over and over again. In Africa I have heard of it working on the issue of food security, where men tend the livestock and women need to compare notes on how to keep the livestock out of the garden. In Spain, the intentional community of Ireholm is clearly run by women. In Alaska, it was a female Attorney General who forced the state to start yielding on the issue of tribal jurisdiction. Please realize that women are rising all over the world. And they must. Look north to your own Kinzua, where the Clan Mothers realized too late that the men had sold the Senecas out on the inundation of that dam on the Allegheny River. They cracked down at last and went to the new President, John Kennedy, full of hope. But he said it was out of his control. The story remains. It needs to be told, and it is clearly put forth in the new Seneca Heritage Center in Salamanca. For how many years have the majority of law school graduates been women? It does move forward. Barbara Fish Heimel is a hero. We need to put her soap box in a museum, and then let her get on top of it and give us hell.

Jane Metzger said...

Sunday's sermon from Pastor Don Caskey at the Presbyterian Church was an exploration of the role of women in the Resurrection story, And when he asked the congregation how many had women Sunday School teachers in their youth, every hand went up. And yet, the men filled the seats on the Session, the Board of Trustees and Deacons and stood before them in the pulpit every Sunday.

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