You Are Some Other Thing

There is only one book I reread on a regular basis. Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson, published in 1980, is a story about drifting and loss and longing, of women existing in the world in an uneasy, awkward way. The idea of living in a house is foreign to the transient Aunt Sylvie and when she sudd...

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Main Author: Hoyt, Victoria
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/artstudents/26
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/viewcontent/Abstract_with_pix.pdf
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https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/2/type/additional/viewcontent/3_Hoyt_thesis_show_We_wore_black_suits.jpg
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/3/type/additional/viewcontent/4_Hoyt_thesis_show.jpg
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/4/type/additional/viewcontent/5_Hoyt_thesis_show_We_had_rituals.jpg
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/5/type/additional/viewcontent/6_Hoyt_thesis_show.jpg
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/6/type/additional/viewcontent/7_Hoyt_thesis_show_The_mornings_cried_out.jpg
https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/7/type/additional/viewcontent/8_Hoyt_thesis_show.jpg
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spellingShingle Art and Design
Hoyt, Victoria
You Are Some Other Thing
topic_facet Art and Design
description There is only one book I reread on a regular basis. Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson, published in 1980, is a story about drifting and loss and longing, of women existing in the world in an uneasy, awkward way. The idea of living in a house is foreign to the transient Aunt Sylvie and when she suddenly has to take care of her nieces, she manages to bring all her homeless habits indoors. She eats in the dark and sleeps on top of her covers and throws rocks at the neighbors’ dogs. My favorite is her collection of tin cans and newspaper stacks invading the living room— instead of sweeping, her idea of housework is accumulation, small measurements of time. Housekeeping reminds me that difference lies in the most ordinary of things. No single thing Sylvie does is very strange, but taken together her habits set her apart; her dedication to impermanence has no place in the concrete, didactic world of the ordinary. And so, she doesn’t stay. She keeps moving and finding new places to live, happy to keep shifting what she wants as she finds it. I think of this show similarly. Each painting is a place of rest from a world that is otherwise. Much of my work is influenced by literature because I can connect characters and moods from various stories in a non-linear way. Reading builds the continuity of women’s experience I draw from and think about when I’m painting. Interviews with feminist authors and artists are just as influential. I am interested in how women can push back and question their roles in the wider world through announcing difference and separation. I think the writer Ursula K. Le Guin said it best: “On the maps drawn by men there is an immense white area, terra incognita, where most women live. That is all yours to explore, to inhabit, to describe.” And this is where I’m coming from, my little Antarctica of female collective presence. It’s a world I know by feeling only, a place I discover and create simultaneously. This exhibition is a marked contrast to my previous work that included disparate components ...
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author Hoyt, Victoria
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title You Are Some Other Thing
title_short You Are Some Other Thing
title_full You Are Some Other Thing
title_fullStr You Are Some Other Thing
title_full_unstemmed You Are Some Other Thing
title_sort you are some other thing
publisher DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln
publishDate 2012
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spelling ftunivnebraskali:oai:digitalcommons.unl.edu:artstudents-1021 2023-11-12T04:06:14+01:00 You Are Some Other Thing Hoyt, Victoria 2012-05-01T07:00:00Z application/pdf https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/artstudents/26 https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/viewcontent/Abstract_with_pix.pdf https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/0/type/additional/viewcontent/1_Hoyt_thesis_show_title_view.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/1/type/additional/viewcontent/2_Hoyt_thesis_show.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/2/type/additional/viewcontent/3_Hoyt_thesis_show_We_wore_black_suits.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/3/type/additional/viewcontent/4_Hoyt_thesis_show.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/4/type/additional/viewcontent/5_Hoyt_thesis_show_We_had_rituals.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/5/type/additional/viewcontent/6_Hoyt_thesis_show.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/6/type/additional/viewcontent/7_Hoyt_thesis_show_The_mornings_cried_out.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/7/type/additional/viewcontent/8_Hoyt_thesis_show.jpg unknown DigitalCommons@University of Nebraska - Lincoln https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/artstudents/26 https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/viewcontent/Abstract_with_pix.pdf https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/0/type/additional/viewcontent/1_Hoyt_thesis_show_title_view.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/1/type/additional/viewcontent/2_Hoyt_thesis_show.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/2/type/additional/viewcontent/3_Hoyt_thesis_show_We_wore_black_suits.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/3/type/additional/viewcontent/4_Hoyt_thesis_show.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/4/type/additional/viewcontent/5_Hoyt_thesis_show_We_had_rituals.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/5/type/additional/viewcontent/6_Hoyt_thesis_show.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/6/type/additional/viewcontent/7_Hoyt_thesis_show_The_mornings_cried_out.jpg https://digitalcommons.unl.edu/context/artstudents/article/1021/filename/7/type/additional/viewcontent/8_Hoyt_thesis_show.jpg Theses, Dissertations, and Student Creative Activity, School of Art, Art History and Design Art and Design text 2012 ftunivnebraskali 2023-10-30T10:54:19Z There is only one book I reread on a regular basis. Housekeeping by Marilynne Robinson, published in 1980, is a story about drifting and loss and longing, of women existing in the world in an uneasy, awkward way. The idea of living in a house is foreign to the transient Aunt Sylvie and when she suddenly has to take care of her nieces, she manages to bring all her homeless habits indoors. She eats in the dark and sleeps on top of her covers and throws rocks at the neighbors’ dogs. My favorite is her collection of tin cans and newspaper stacks invading the living room— instead of sweeping, her idea of housework is accumulation, small measurements of time. Housekeeping reminds me that difference lies in the most ordinary of things. No single thing Sylvie does is very strange, but taken together her habits set her apart; her dedication to impermanence has no place in the concrete, didactic world of the ordinary. And so, she doesn’t stay. She keeps moving and finding new places to live, happy to keep shifting what she wants as she finds it. I think of this show similarly. Each painting is a place of rest from a world that is otherwise. Much of my work is influenced by literature because I can connect characters and moods from various stories in a non-linear way. Reading builds the continuity of women’s experience I draw from and think about when I’m painting. Interviews with feminist authors and artists are just as influential. I am interested in how women can push back and question their roles in the wider world through announcing difference and separation. I think the writer Ursula K. Le Guin said it best: “On the maps drawn by men there is an immense white area, terra incognita, where most women live. That is all yours to explore, to inhabit, to describe.” And this is where I’m coming from, my little Antarctica of female collective presence. It’s a world I know by feeling only, a place I discover and create simultaneously. This exhibition is a marked contrast to my previous work that included disparate components ... Text Antarc* Antarctica University of Nebraska-Lincoln: DigitalCommons@UNL