Some
photos courtesy of Philadelphia Inquirer
http://inquirer.philly.com/slideshows/Features/20060516soap/
Monthly
Statement:
May
2006
*I will continue collecting soap indefinitely after the official
ending of this project in September. If you are interested
in contributing soap or stories to my continued efforts, please
email jillgreenberg27@hotmail.com
or mail slivers to the address at the bottom of this text.
I Manic panic!
The opening of the School 33 Studio Artists’ Biennial
Exhibition was in two days, and all I had done was to sort
the slivers and mock up a rudimentary paisley outline on a
piece of black fabric on my studio floor. (Ah, the next in
my lifetime series of wing-and-a-prayer productions.) The
first order of business was some basic housekeeping; old soap
slivers stored in boxes produce a fine powder that causes
violent sneezing attacks. In addition, I planned to arrange
the slivers on black velvet, which shows everything, so a
necessary first step was to run a damp cloth over the slivers
to remove the powdery residue. Though tedious, dusting the
slivers individually gave me a chance to appreciate the distinctive
features of each. I noticed that when I shuffled the thicker
slivers together they made a clinking sound indistinguishable
from that of shuffling ceramic tiles. This was satisfying
since it lent authenticity to the idea that this piece would
be a mosaic.
I built my platform in place on the gallery floor. It measured
54” x 70”, its top surface neatly upholstered
in black velvet. But there was lint on it—better take
care of that. So…off to the strip mall, where I appraised
several orders of lint brush. Will it be the adhesive roller
type, or that red plush fabric one that traps lint within
its surface fibers? Why not get both? And should I spend the
extra $2.98 for the 3M brand or am I just being a sucka, when
the Savings Plus one’ll do just fine? And… oooh
there’s a sale next door at Goodwill, and since I’m
out, I might as well pick up some decent food for dinner,
instead of desperately heading to the Pto Mein Palace for
a carton of Buddha’s Blight at 11 PM, and by the way,
aren’t my books on tape overdue? Maybe I should get
one more, and…and…..Oh yeah, the terror of the
proverbial blank canvas—it choreographs an elaborate,
yet familiar dance routine!
Getting a grip, I returned to my studio and started ferrying
soap into the gallery space down the hall. The slivers were
sorted into numerous small containers mainly by color, but
with consideration for size, shape and texture as well. I
set them around the platform in soap’s best approximation
of a ROY G BIV spectrum, with the warm colors on one side
and the cooler ones on the other. Glancing into the batch
of blue and white marbled specimens, I noticed that the majority
had white stripes swirling through a blue ground, however,
a handful actually had a white base with blue veining that
resembled bleu cheese mold. I wondered if the bleu cheese
soaps should have a category to themselves. And what was I
thinking when I put all the oatmeal soaps in one group? Some
were cream and some were tan, and some were practically butterscotch!
And what was that lemon yellow doing in there with the golds?
By this time I was convinced I should rush up the street to
that storefront psychic before closing and have her channel
Carolus Linnaeus to help me sort through this taxonomic nightmare!
The obsessive lifestyle is a high maintenance proposition.
then I stopped…and breathed....and looked….and
tried to grasp the task in front of me: OK there was a black
background on which I would arrange a paisley design of soap
slivers in a beautiful array of colors, shapes, sizes and
textures. It would have to work hard to look bad, so where
was the problem?
Feeling a degree of relief, I got the ball rolling, as planned,
by using the 11-pound box of half-used bars of Irish Spring
contributed by Sheldon Goldthwait to “draw” the
outlines of the paisley shapes. He found this odd collection
in 1996 among the possessions of his deceased mother, Ruth,
(see statement 12/05).
Once the outlines were laid out, I needed to come up with
an organized scheme for “coloring them in” that
took into account the relative abundance of some hues versus
the scarcity of others. Creating the right combination of
rhythmic contrast and smooth transitions between the colors,
shapes, and sizes was key.
What emerged during the next 48 hours were two paisleys: the
larger was filled in with a gradually transitioning scale
of warmer colors with accents of deep blue, and the smaller
contained cooler colors, mostly greens, blues and the rare
assortment of lavenders. I used whites and off-whites with
random chips of colored soap to define the spaces surrounding
the paisleys. It did not bother me that I didn’t have
enough white soap to evenly cover the space between the paisleys.
Since this was a work in progress it made sense to show that
there was room for more donations. However, to finish the
dotted pattern I had begun in this sparsely covered area,
I grabbed about a dozen brand new round white hotel soaps
did a little obsessive-compulsive hand washing ritual over
a bowl of warm water in the middle of the gallery floor to
shrink them down to a more used look. When I was done, the
sudsy water in the bowl had a gooey consistency like whipped
dessert topping left out on the counter for a half day. By
some ridiculous hour of the morning, I considered the piece
as finished as it was gonna get.
II A Soap Star
For all my efforts, attendance at the opening was unexpectedly
low, however, this disappointment was quelled by the fact
that I had an interview with The Philadelphia Inquirer (see
statement 4/06) a few days later for a story they would run
on my project in advance of its scheduled exhibition in July
at the Bebe Benoliel Gallery in Philly. With any luck, the
article would bring in an influx of soap from the Philly environs.
I knew the reporter—quick witted and genial Dianna Marder,
and the photographer, my good buddy, David M Warren (AKA Cap’n
Quirk) from my days, years ago, as a shooter there. We chatted
over lunch and returned to the gallery to take photos.
Dave’s quirky eye immediately lighted on a small chunk
of soap that strongly resembled a cameo of a pilgrim woman
in her starched, puritanical bonnet. He immediately dropped
to his knees to shoot her. Looking at the photo now, I’m
starting to wonder if she might actually be an earthly manifestation
of “Our Lady of Nasal Protuberance,” in which
case I might do well to target publicity of her future appearances
to the appropriate religious communities and see what kind
of crowd she draws, or at least, list her on E Bay. For the
main photo of me with the piece, we figured out a way of magically
levitating me about 3 feet above the work lying on my back
(with the help of a hidden 2 x 4 supporting me from beneath.)
It was no coincidence that I wore my favorite paisley shirt.
We broke open the bottle of cheap merlot prior to my performing
the promised washing-the-mouth-out-with-soap pose for Dr.
Dave’s sadistic camera, (and just for the record, I
do my own stunts!) I had several brand new bars of soap selected
for the purpose, and we discussed which color and shape would
photograph best wedged in of my mouth. The fuchsia bar of
strawberry scented glycerin soap was the first course, but
it failed to deliver sufficient alkaline zing to produce a
grimace that satisfied Dave’s art directorial vision,
so we switched to a bar of peach colored Tropical Fresh Zest,
which terrorized my taste buds for hours afterwards, but Dave
got the picture, and that’s what counts.
The story came out great! It sparkled with Dianna’s
humor and Dave’s fantastic photo on the section front.
And the responses were immediate. The first email I received
was from Larry Buzby of Ocean City, NJ:
“Your project is one of the coolest things I've ever
seen! Showed it to kids on the schoolbus this morning, telling
them that true ART can come from anywhere.
Buzz”
That he recognized the potential of quotidian objects to become
“true ART” and shared this notion with a bus full
of students filled me with joy. I emailed him back, asking
if he might post a flyer about the project and put a collection
basket on his bus. He responded, mentioning the impracticalities
of this plan: the school year was almost over, and that the
bus, on which he was an aide, was for special-ed students,
of whom there were only 6. So no soap there, but still, the
idea that this piece reaches people outside of the rarified
realm of Art thrills me!
I got my first west coast soap from Leena Kwon of Lathrop,
CA, so now I can officially say that contributions to this
project come from Maine to California. It touched me that
Lena sent her homemade soap slivers in a small box covered
in delicately patterned gift-wrap. Some of the slivers were
from soap she made with chocolate milk, and others, made with
mostly oatmeal with just enough soap to bind it together were
for exfoliating. The latter looked kind of like some kind
of cookie one might feed to a good little pony.
When Ruth C. Mullaney of Williamsburg, VA saw the article,
it reminded her of a poem she had written years ago about
used VS new soap:
“On Soap
A new cake of soap is a thing of delight,
Its smoothness and shape, a form just right
There’s something brand new, a promise of fresh start
In its unmarred state bringing joy to the heart.
The lettering there is sharp and clear
In its way a sculpture (transient, but here,)
The moment of newness to treasure not mar
Is what we can do on opening the bar.
So much for the new, now consider the old…
Seems better to melt away doing its job
Than be carried along an unsightly blob.”
It tickled me that Ruth took the time to share this, and I
immediately called her on the phone to thank her.
Dorothy Levin, an 85 year old artist from Elkins Park, PA,
saw the article and wrote me a note that made my ego purrrrrrr:
“I think of Van Gogh’s brush strokes when I see
your work.” I was so flattered by this compliment I
immediately sent her my right ear. OK, not really, but I did
call her and we chatted. She makes constructions with found
objects on wood, and had enclosed a Polaroid of one of her
recent pieces. I admire her work as well as her spirit, and
hope to visit her sometime.
I received a mother lode of multi-colored slivers from Jean
Robinson of Wayne, PA. Sadly, the collector was her recently
deceased husband, Jason Guy Robinson. A policeman who worked
in gang control and drug abuse prevention, Jason Robinson
was a renaissance man; he studied art and theater, hosted
several Philly radio shows, read avidly, and even recorded
“two albums of poetry read to original jazz compositions.”
Jean wrote: “he would have been thrilled about your
work. We collected contemporary art.” She mentioned
that she used to soften her husbands soap slivers and mold
them into little hand soaps using a soap press she had ordered
from a catalog. Thus Jean confirmed that soap presses, about
which the prisoners of the Milwaukee County Jail had joked
(see statement 10/06), actually exist. Jason Guy Robinson
is the third person whom I’ve had the honor of memorializing
in this work.
III Testing the Bath Water
An RA from the Maryland Institute College of Art dormitories
convinced me that I would collect oodles of soap from the
students as they were moving out of the dorms for the summer
and casting off possessions willy nilly. I put a couple of
collection baskets in the dorm entrances, along with a bag
of candy. The candy lasted nearly 30 minutes, and was replaced
by only a paltry handful of soaps over the next couple of
days. I think most students are too wrapped up in their own
projects to offer much assistance with mine.
For months since learning about my project, my uncle, a world
traveler, has been sending me LOADS of brand new hotel soap
from all over Europe. Its obvious he’s sending far more
unused soap than he gets from his room alone. I have visions
of him raiding the maid’s cart in the hallway while
she’s changing the sheets in the room next door, but
I’m hoping that he asks first. Months ago, I had the
idea of distributing these bars to the men living in The Ready
Willing and Able residential program of the Doe Fund, Inc.
in Philadelphia, some of whom I had met at a community gathering
way back in October (see statement 10/6.) It took until the
middle of May before I could present the project to the whole
group of guys at their weekly Wednesday meeting. They seemed
amused by my nervously delivered spiel about the Accumulation
Project, but I had no idea what to expect when I left them
a box of about 50 hotel bars.
IV The Trials of an Ass Soap Deputy
I have a confession to make: though this is the May statement,
I am writing this on Thanksgiving weekend. Yeah, I got a little
behind on the task. For those who have not read my earlier
monthly statements, Jeff (see 10/06, 11/06, 12/06, 2/06, 4/06)
is a Deputy Sheriff at the Milwaukee County Jail with a sense
of humor and of community service. He read about the project
and responded to my cause by starting a collection of the
prisoners’ discarded soap. He had sent me a 5 lb. box
in December, but reported in February, that the prison had
switched to liquid soap. He also mentioned to me under conditions
of strict confidentiality that he was in some deep doo doo
at work. Since he couldn’t talk about it, he referred
me to a news article that I could Google, and I learned that
Jeff’s partner had gotten into an altercation with a
prisoner, who claimed she was abused during the ensuing struggle.
Jeff witnessed this and his account stressed that he did not
feel his partner used undue force in subduing the prisoner.
Shortly thereafter, Jeff’s supervisor “The Sergeant,”
whom the article suggested had some problems with Jeff’s
partner and may have seen this as a convenient way to get
rid of her, asked him to change certain areas of the report.
Jeff refused. The Sergeant persisted. Again Jeff refused to
change his account. The Sergeant continued to pressure Jeff.
Since Jeff was friends with The Sergeant, he decided to use
humor to get the point across to his superior that he would
not deviate from his truthful testimony. So, from his initial
report, that read: “….she (the prisoner) was yelling
and screaming unintelligibly from cell 6…” Jeff
removes the word “unintelligibly” and composes
a colorful and, I must say, inspired script of obscenities
that he has the prisoner direct at the Sergeant, the content
of which suggested that certain constrictive muscles of the
Sergeant’s body essential to control of excretory functions
had become more relaxed than perhaps was desirable. This altered
report was a mere joke intended to force his then buddy, The
Sergeant, to finally get the message that Jeff refused to
falsify his statement. It was never signed or made official,
nonetheless, Jeff was required to read it in court during
his partner’s felony “abuse of residents of a
penal facility” case. OUCH!!! Needless to say, Jeff
embarrassed the family, and this could not go unpunished.
Jeff had a disciplinary hearing scheduled for late February,
meanwhile he broke his ankle on the job, keeping him out of
work and delaying the proceedings. When he returned 6 weeks
later, the prisoners were back to showering with bar soap
(they had switched to liquid for awhile) so I thought he’d
be back in business as “Ass Soap Deputy” providing
me with soap (see statement 11/05,) but not long after returning
to work, he was put on paid suspension pending a termination
hearing. Apparently refusing to change your written testimony
when your superior asks you to, and then telling a jury that
you were asked to do so is grounds for dismissal in certain
sectors of law enforcement. I exchanged a few emails with
Jeff during this time, offering support, since I still considered
him a friend even though I assumed our prison shower soap
collecting days were over. It was not until September 18 that
I learned the results of his termination hearing. To Jeff’s
amazement, justice prevailed: most of the charges against
him were dropped and he received a 30 day unpaid suspension.
When he hit me with the Word that he was still a Deputy Sheriff,
he also surprised me with the Good News that during the short
interval last spring when he was back at work (after the ankle
injury and before his first suspension) he had managed to
collect a BIG BAG of soap. The Bad News was that because of
this new suspension, he would not be able to retrieve the
goods from the floor of his locker until mid-November.
Yo Dep! The Turkey’s on the table and the punkin pie’s
in the oven— Do I have to wait for Santa to deliver
my package?
May’s contributor/collaborators
include:
Jean Robinson and the late Guy Robinson of Wayne, PA; David
M Warren, Collingswood, NJ; Dianna Marder, Elkins Park, PA;
Roberta Porter of Cherry Hill, NJ; Rochelle Haines of Cherry
Hill, NJ; Jennifer Fanning of Hoboken, NJ; the DeHavens of
Unionville, PA; Joy Berenfield, Arlington, MA;
the Slotkins of New York City; Dan Levine, Tampa FL; Pete
Hayes of Philadelphia, PA; Helen Parke of Philadelphia, PA;
Lena Kwon of Lathrop, CA; and anonymous students from Maryland
Institute College of Art, Baltimore, MD; Dorothy Levin, Elkins
Park, PA; Larry Buzby, Ocean City, NJ; Ruth Mullaney, Williamsburg,
VA
To contribute soap, you may mail it to:
Jill Greenberg
1440 E. Baltimore St. Apt. 3A
Baltimore, MD 21231
Padding or a small box is suggested for thin or delicate slivers.
Many thanks,
Jill
Feel free
to email me at jillgreenberg27@hotmail.com
if you wish to contribute soap slivers to the project or to
send a comment.
Washington Post article available here.
Process:
I will be accumulating remnants of used bars of soap by soliciting
contributions through networks of friends and acquaintances.
I am also looking into receiving donations through local hotels
and collection boxes set up in various locales.
|