'Undressed' at Public Works: Nakedness, More Nakedness and Some Badass Native American Girl-Power
04 May 2011
May I suggest Undressed — the latest Public Works Pop-Up Gallery show — as a stealth date idea? Through May 11, the Mission art/music/creative space is hosting their most provocative exhibit yet. With fleshy works by local artists, what stood out were the elaborate, bust-baring Native American supernatural creatures by Chelsea Brown.
While some of the other works at the Undressed are pretty out there (think orgies), Brown's were more subtle, only featured women and were power-driven. Brown, who loves to work “the badass female angle,” explained: “Women are usually the main subjects of my work. A state of nudity shouldn't be seen as a state of vulnerability; it should be perceived as a person in their purest, most natural state of being. The women in my pieces for the show turn this natural state into power with a supernatural flair.”
Brown's Native American influence is strong. The petite artist, in her Navajo garb and feather earrings, dresses (and obsesses) the part. “I find their culture fascinating, and in a lot of ways superior to modern culture today. Nature is revered as a life giver — the Native Americans recognized their ultimate dependence upon it. This concept informs my work in Undressed as well; the women draw their power from nature and are able to thrive on it. I joked that at this point, we humans should probably stop what we're doing, get naked, and have an elaborate bison-worshipping fire dance ceremony immediately. But seriously, we should.”
You can catch Chelsea next at Project One Gallery starting May 19.
Samantha Durbin is a lifestyle writer who honed her blogging skills as Editor of FabSugar.com. Samantha graduated from The Fashion Institute of Technology, also writes for San Francisco magazine and shares her musings via her poly-blog network, led by SFonFire.