Maker(s): | Skoglund, Sandra Louise
| Culture: | American (1946 - )
| Title: | Liquid Origins Fluid Dreams; Restroom Project
| Date Made: | 2000
| Type: | Installation
| Materials: | porcelain bathroom fixtures and wall tiles
| Place Made: | United States; Wisconsin; Sheboygan
| Measurements: | overall: 106 x 297 x 148 in.; 269.24 x 754.38 x 375.92 cm
| Narrative Inscription: | unsigned, undated
| Accession Number: | SC TR 6301.1
| Credit Line: | This washroom, created by Sandy Skoglund, was made possible by funding from the Kohler Trust for Arts and Education and Kohler Company. The altered plumbing products were created by Sandy Skoglund in Arts/Industry, a long-term artist-in-residence program of the John Michael Kohler Arts Center of Sheboygan, Wisconsin
| Museum Collection: | Smith College Museum of Art
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Currently on view |
Label Text: Liquid Origins, Fluid Dreams, by Sandy Skoglund, is black and white from floor to ceiling. Skoglund made drawings of ten creation narratives from different cultures for the wall tiles, as well as ten different images of spattered droplets that alternate with the story scenes. The stories involve wet beginnings, loneliness, and sometimes death and violence.
In the Arctic story, the Creator becomes a Raven and is tickled by the grass people to release the sun and light the world. The African god Bumba creates the world from a stomach-ache. In the Scandinavian story, twelve rivers are presided over by the ice giant, Ymir, who was eventually killed by his three sons. The Australian original ancestor, Karora, gave birth to bandicoots and sons. In the Native American story, a woman falls from the sky and is supported by a giant tortoise. In the Egyptian story, humankind is created in the tears of the original bird, while in the Mayan legend, people are created from the fingers cut from the hand of one of the four original gods. Brahman, the original being of the Indian creation story, took human form to divide and reunite in procreation. The Greek goddess Eurynome mated with a serpent and took the form of bird; the world was hatched from her egg. The Chinese god Pan Gu was also born from an egg. After his death, humankind was created from fleas on his body.
Link to share this object record: https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=SC+TR+6301.1 |