A Progressive Lens | 36.4

2013

There is a point in which we no longer see things the same way we once did. It is not simply that we find it difficult to read miniscule print on labels listing the ingredients to things we know we shouldn’t eat. It is the fact that, with our life experiences, we weigh the importance of things differently.

There is a point in which we no longer see things the same way we once did. It is not simply that we find it difficult to read miniscule print on labels listing the ingredients to things we know we shouldn’t eat. It is the fact that, with our life experiences, we weigh the importance of things differently.

“A Progressive Lens” emerged from an open call for submissions. From there, it came into focus under the influence of our commissioned author, Rhea Tregebov, featured artist, Heather Benning, and our interview with writer Gail Anderson-Dargatz.

Site-specific installation artist Heather Benning has startling work that challenges and plays with our expectations. A dollhouse stands illuminated in an azure night. Nothing seems amiss: the pastel walls, the miniture furnishings, the piano hinge marking the roofline. Only upon closer inspection is it clear that this is not in fact what it seems; it is a life-size farmhouse, a building with history. Now with a wall peeled away, it stands beautiful and playful in a dark field. It begs the questions: Are we all still children playing house? Do we play at life? What if we are the dolls?

In “Other Girls,” Rhea Tregebov takes us back in time chronologically, and into the life of a young woman sorting out her identity. It is not simply a nostalgic tale, but an insightful narrative. Her story reminds us how our balance, of what we deem important in life, tips with experience.

Though we cannot really know what it is to live the life of another, we can appreciate their experiences if we allow ourselves to be enveloped within their stories. Gail Anderson-Dargatz reminds us to slow down and look closely at the world we live in, to really imagine what it might be like from a different angle from the one we’ve grown accustomed to.

The pieces in this issue provide us with a shift of perspective, perhaps even, a progressive lens, one that is less conservative, more playful, intriguing. Progressive lenses allow us to see the fine print that we may have glossed over, or never really tried to see. As you read through our pages, take your time, sit back, and allow the shift to begin. Enjoy.

Room 36.4: A Progressive lens

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In this issue: Susan Alexander, Erin Ashenhurst, Heather Benning, Susan Braley, Mary Corkery, Susan (Crowe) Fenner, Taryn Hubbard, Sarah L. Johnson, Molly Lynch, Nico Mara-McKay, Nadine McCallen, Almeda Glenn Miller, Lorrie Miller, Chelsea Novak, Abby Paige, Janna Payne, Dorothy Raffo, Autumn Richardson, Lindsey Robinson, Carrie Schmidt, Nilofar Shidmehr, Marie Elyse St. George, Rhea Tregebov, Emily Wall, Deborah Whelan, Cathleen With, Jennifer Zilm