Susan Amorde: She May Have Lots of Baggage But She’s Going Somewhere

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Susan Amorde has a lot of baggage. Or rather, her art includes many works that feature suitcases, trunks, and briefcases as a part of sculptures that travel the distance – evocative, edged with mystery and a dark magic.

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Suspended from the ceiling, or weighted on the floor, this luggage isn’t easy to unpack.

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From sculptural works made with vintage suitcases to beautiful figurative works in clay, wax, bronze, and plaster, Amorde’s work is moody and emotional; she takes viewers on a journey that is both spiritual and literal. She takes on the metaphorical idea of baggage, and how what we carry with us emotionally can become what we are in life. Her work is often witty, with a double entendre rooted within its sculptural nuance. Below, for example, from her Dick and Jane series, is “Woe is Dick.” Amusing, scatological, and brilliantly anguished, this is a fresh take on what could very well be toxic masculinity as it affects its “owner.”

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What travels through all of Amorde’s work is a muscular strength, a determination and a sense of a discovery. What is it that we find so precious, that we we must take with us everywhere we go? What is it that we find a necessity to bring with us, to pack away, to shape our journey through life, to shape us?

With “Mort’s Briefcase,” below, from her Baggage series, the artist juxtaposes the mixed media of a key and a wall hook with a beautiful sculpture of a man with his open brief case, standing on a small trunk. So much here: the secret content of the receptacle on which he stands; how his body has morphed into a series of objects – the key symbolic of the things he has long locked away.

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Other, smaller keys are attached to his arms. Such weight: why do we lock away our secrets, and how do they continue to impact our lives even if we keep them out of sight? Amorde has said that “We as individuals, as well as society and culture, have baggage that we carry around and that either enhances or impedes our daily lives. I incorporate the figure with sculptures of suitcases or use mixed-media to explore how we feel about  ‘baggage’ and what it looks like.”

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At times, what Amorde seems to be telling the viewer is to really look inside that suitcase, to emotionally unpack. In other works, she’s showing us the richness of everything we carry, the wildness and passion of even our most fraught memories. There is a darkness and an edge to some of her works, as with her stunning “On the Edge,” below. Here a woman is weighted down, trapped under lock and key. She has literally become the baggage she carries and is in torment from it.  Is her freedom just a flick of a lock away?

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Weighted with an anchor and chain, the suitcase below is emblematic of more than just one individual, symbolic of modern life itself. The more we have to do, the more we may gain or lose, the more we have to hide. And whatever we’ve kept hidden gets heavier, and heavier, until what we are dragging with us might very well take us to the bottom of the sea and leave us to drown there. “Route 66 Anchor and Chains,” below, has an interesting title. Route 66, after all, was where we were to get our kicks, not our chains.

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And once sunk under the sea, perhaps we are still “Drowning in Indecision,” the title of the work below.

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Amorde’s series of water portal sculptures are especially beautiful, the liquid sections of each piece feel illuminated with light. Perhaps once we drown what we carry we can finally be made free. Or perhaps we are still on the hook for our burdens.

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Her “Wounded Baggage,” above, is classically framed, shot through with bloodied arrows. We can try to kill the demons that we carry, but yet they bleed.

One of the many fascinating things about Amorde’s work is how many questions her art raises. She gives us no pat replies: we are finding insight more than answers.

This is an artist ready to travel, taking viewers on a long and internal journey with her and her art.  To quote The Beatles “Boy you gotta carry that weight/carry that weight a long time.”

Amorde’s profound, anguished, and rich art might just help lighten the load.

  • Genie Davis; photos: Susan Amorde, Genie Davis

 

Susan Amorde

 

Installation photos by SDK Photo & Design
From riveting figures to figurative baggage, sculptor and installation artist Susan Amorde explores the intersection of the human body and human emotions. Her figures evoke the wonder, majesty, and humor that make up life itself; her installations evoke the need for change and our reluctance, as a species, to let go.

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Amorde works primarily from live models with her figurative work, creating her sculptures in terra cotta clay, hydrocal, bronze, wax, and mixed media. Sculptures such as “Leaning Left Bookend or Not” and “Leaning Right Bookend or Not,” are supple bronze figures that seem to be melting into the thick bronze blocks on which they’re reclining. Long-legged and curvy, these women evoke the longing to move, and the comfort of remaining in place. Also reclining is the full color vibrancy of “Maura,” a hydrocal figure on a terry-cloth pool raft. Maura is a big bodied, jubilant nude, smiling at an unseen sun, amusing us with her dominance and joy, a whimsical figure with an edge. Mixing hydrocal and bronze on a marble base, “Shadow (The King)” is a stately bust of a young man wearing a crown. Study him to see his vulnerability, arrogance, longing; a shadow of the youth and power that will fade in time is etched in his eyes. “My practice explores the human form and emotions as we navigate life’s challenges,” Amorde says. Her expressionist style is beautifully suited for this twinned exploration.

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More surreal, Amorde’s series “Baggage” is the artist’s “personal examination of the universal themes associated with how what we carry around impacts our identity.” Using mixed media to explore both the literal and metaphorical meaning of baggage, the artist works from the premise that everyone carries some baggage with them in life, whether figurative, metaphysical, or emotional. Amorde “investigates how such baggage is perceived, how it feels, and how it impacts the living of our lives.” Integrating her sculptures with suitcases, suitcase parts, and other mixed media and found objects, many of her installations are large scale, as sweeping in scope as the baggage that we all carry in our lives. Amorde has plans for future works in this series that will include found objects, audio and video.

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Like her subjects, Amorde doesn’t travel light. Each piece in the “Baggage” series is quite literally freighted with meaning. “Zebra and the Red Pillow,” a mixed media and polychromed ceramic work, features a dazzlingly white and zebra-striped woman with haunted eyes lying on a red pillow which is positioned inside a zebra-striped travel bag.

She’s made her bed and isn’t sure she wants to lie in it, and is certainly not ready for the lid to close. Her long, pale, striped body is a part of that bag and she an evocation of it, and the life she’s made for herself. “Untitled (Baggage Station)” is a massive 7 ft. by 7 ft. mixed media installation of a variety of suitcases positioned on wooden storage shelves. The shapes and positioning of the suitcases – in all sizes and colors – reminds the viewer of people waiting to travel, waiting to perhaps shed their outer skin or inner problems and pass on without the baggage both imply.

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“Wounded Baggage” joins a dart board studded with bloody arrows to the surface of an aging green suitcase. Both immediately accessible and defiantly surreal, the piece calls the viewer to understand, and challenges the idea of literally carrying on in the face of adversity. The artist seems to posit the question – just what are we carrying on?

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Both Amorde’s figures and installation art have a mystical quality that belies the intensity of her expression. “I am drawn to sculpting the human form in narratives about challenges and mysteries in life. Equally appealing to me are portraits and studies of the figure that are celebrations of individuality. For me, sculpting people and their ‘baggage’ provides me with an endlessly fascinating journey of creative expression,” Amorde says.

The Los Angeles based artist was born in Washington, D.C., grew up in LA, and has a BFA from California State University, Long Beach. She recently exhibited at the Zero Down exhibition at 1019 West in Inglewood, the DAB Art Ventura at the HUD Gallery in Ventura, Calif. and the Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery (LAMAG) in Los Angeles’ Barnsdall Park. Exhibiting since 2000, Amorde has shown at Gallery 825, the TAG Gallery in Santa Monica, Gallery Godo in Glendale, and at the Getty Underground at the J. Paul Getty Museum/Villa in Malibu, Calif. among many other galleries and museums.

Amorde lives in Los Angeles and maintains a studio in Inglewood, Calif. Exhibiting both locally and nationally, she’s on the web at www.susanamorde.com.