Emily Erb: American Love Story

Exhibition Website

Feb 6 2018 - Apr 9 2018

Emily Erb [MFA ‘12] contemplates American values and ideals in American Love Story. Her silk paintings are created using an Eastern technique she learned in Madagascar in 2005. By combining this ancient silk painting tradition with imagery often collected from American paper currency, Erb investigates the tension between authoritative Western ideals and America’s ethnic and racial diversity. She argues, “There is no ‘American culture’ per se, it's not hamburgers. The beauty of America is immigration.”

Erb says about her work:
“Guns cannot be restricted because “Americans love their guns.” Infrastructure spending can’t be shifted from highways to public transportation because “Americans love their cars.” It is a perceived autonomy that Americans love. My art is an exploration of American identity. The process involves collecting imagery that references American history and culture, collaging it into iconic symbols, tracing the collage onto silk, and then painting in the silk with dyes. I am particularly interested in the imagery found on American paper currency throughout its history. Silk itself was a currency for centuries on the Silk Road, connecting East and West. The closing of this trade route during the Crusades led to the European discovery of North America through the search of alternate routes towards wealth. By re-creating imagery found on U.S. and Confederate paper currency, I can point to some of the sources of my beliefs about the values of America, as well the power of art.”

Credit: Exhibition overview from museum website

  • Painting
  • American
  • Contemporary
  • Emily Erb

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