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University Communications

September 14, 2005

Artist Denise Marika’s “Body Actions” on Display at Clark University

Ash, 2004, steel, ash and video projection, 75 x 59 x 3
Ash, 2004, steel, ash and video projection, 75 x 59 x 3" Gnaw, 2004 video on 13
Gnaw, 2004 video on 13" flat screen

WORCESTER, MA-- Nationally renowned artist Denise Marika’s exhibition “Body Actions” (formerly titled “Battle”) is currently on display at Clark University’s Schiltkamp Gallery in the Traina Center for the Arts, 92 Downing Street, Worcester. The exhibit is running through Sunday, November 6. The artist’s talk will be held on Thursday, October 27, from 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. in Razzo Hall, Traina Center for the Arts. The event is sponsored by Clark’s Higgins School of the Humanities. An opening reception will be held at 5:30 p.m.

Marika uses her nude body as the channel for communicating universal themes of longing, decay, power, vulnerability, and anomie. Enacting ritualistic but common actions that are repeated over and over, she lays bare some of our deepest, most primal fears, aggressions, and desires. We literally read the language of her body, which is at once shockingly familiar and oddly distant, as if we are looking at her through a one-way mirror.

Marika’s installation includes video sculptures as well as photographic stills derived from the videos. The video and photographic images are embedded in various sculptural frameworks and often include sound so that the images are given symbolic context and amplified impact. For example, the series of seven photographs in “Battle” is displayed within a staggered series of steel beams so that the narrative of male/female struggle is viewed within this rigid, narrow, vertical structure.

“My work addresses social concerns and issues that are embodied in personal struggles played out in our day to day lives,” said Marika. “I am offering personal gestures disassembled and re-embodied.”

The Clark show also premiers Marika’s new work, “Ash.”

The artist has exhibited internationally and is the recipient of numerous awards and fellowships, including the NEA, the LEF Foundation, the Bunting Institute at Radcliffe College, New England Foundation for the Arts and the Massachusetts Cultural Council. She has been an Artist in Residence at the Isabella Stuart Gardner Museum, the ICA in Boston, and The School of Theology in Claremont, Calif. She currently teaches at Massachusetts College of Art. In 2001, she was commissioned to do a project on “the Wall” over the atrium in the Worcester Art Museum and has undertaken public art commissions in Boston, New York, Scotland, and Germany.

Gallery hours are Monday through Thursday, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.; Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.; Saturday noon to 5 p.m., and Sunday noon to 7 p.m. For more information, call (508) 793-7113.


Clark University is a private, co-educational liberal-arts research university with 2,000 undergraduate and 800 graduate students. Since its founding in 1887 as the first all-graduate school in the United States, Clark has challenged convention with innovative programs such as the International Studies Stream, the Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies and the accelerated BA/MA programs with the fifth year tuition-free for eligible students.


Angela M. Bazydlo
Associate Director of Media Relations
Clark University
Worcester, Mass.
phone: 508-793-7635
www.clarku.edu

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