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Moses Myers House

323 E. Freemason St.
Open Saturday and Sunday

Noon–5 p.m.

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

Reading Room
Wednesday-Friday
10 a.m.–5 p.m.
Closed May 17-19, 2024

About the Myers House

The oldest Jewish home in America open to the public as a museum offers a glimpse of the life of an early 19th century merchant family.
More about the house

About the Library

With an extensive collection of more than 106,000 rare and unique volumes relating to the history of art, the Jean Outland Chrysler Art Library is one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the library

Located in Norfolk

One Memorial Place,
Norfolk, VA
Get Directions

While You're Here

Visit our Museum Shop
and Zinnia Cafe.

Perry Glass Studio

A state-of-art facility on the Museum’s campus. See a free glassmaking demo Tuesdays–Sunday at noon. Like what you see? Take a class with us! More about the Studio

The Myers House

The home of the first permanent Jewish residents of Norfolk, this historic house offers a glimpse of the life of a wealthy early 19th-century merchant family.
More about the house

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

With an extensive collection of more than 106,000 rare and unique volumes relating to the history of art, the Jean Outland Chrysler Library is one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the Library

Wedding & Event Rentals

The perfect place for your big day or special event. Get the details

Field Trips

Field trips are available for groups of 60 or fewer. More about field trips

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

Visit one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the library

About the Chrysler

Our story spans well over 100 years. See where we began, how we grew, and where we're going. Explore our history

News and Announcements

See what's happening at the Museum, read Chrysler Magazine, and find our Media Center. Read now

Location

One Memorial Place
Norfolk, VA 23510

Location

245 Grace Street
Norfolk, VA 23510
757-333-6299

Always Free Parking

Get Directions

Visiting Artist Series

Bringing the world’s top glass art talent to Hampton Roads
Find out more

Studio Team

Meet the brilliant minds behind the Studio.
See the team

Give the Chrysler Experience

Share everything you love about the Chrysler Museum with a gift membership. Perfect for everyone on your list.

The Masterpiece Society

Learn about this innovative group of museum supporters.
Meet the Masterpiece Society

Planned Giving

Help ensure the long-term success of the Museum.
Learn about planned giving

Moses Myers House

323 E. Freemason St.
Open Saturday and Sunday

Noon–5 p.m.

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

Reading Room
Wednesday-Friday
10 a.m.–5 p.m.
Closed May 17-19, 2024

About the Myers House

The oldest Jewish home in America open to the public as a museum offers a glimpse of the life of an early 19th century merchant family.
More about the house

About the Library

With an extensive collection of more than 106,000 rare and unique volumes relating to the history of art, the Jean Outland Chrysler Art Library is one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the library

Located in Norfolk

One Memorial Place,
Norfolk, VA
Get Directions

While You're Here

Visit our Museum Shop
and Zinnia Cafe.

Perry Glass Studio

A state-of-art facility on the Museum’s campus. See a free glassmaking demo Tuesdays–Sunday at noon. Like what you see? Take a class with us! More about the Studio

The Myers House

The home of the first permanent Jewish residents of Norfolk, this historic house offers a glimpse of the life of a wealthy early 19th-century merchant family.
More about the house

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

With an extensive collection of more than 106,000 rare and unique volumes relating to the history of art, the Jean Outland Chrysler Library is one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the Library

Wedding & Event Rentals

The perfect place for your big day or special event. Get the details

Field Trips

Field trips are available for groups of 60 or fewer. More about field trips

Jean Outland Chrysler Library

Visit one of the most significant art libraries in the South. More about the library

About the Chrysler

Our story spans well over 100 years. See where we began, how we grew, and where we're going. Explore our history

News and Announcements

See what's happening at the Museum, read Chrysler Magazine, and find our Media Center. Read now

Location

One Memorial Place
Norfolk, VA 23510

Location

245 Grace Street
Norfolk, VA 23510
757-333-6299

Always Free Parking

Get Directions

Visiting Artist Series

Bringing the world’s top glass art talent to Hampton Roads
Find out more

Studio Team

Meet the brilliant minds behind the Studio.
See the team

Give the Chrysler Experience

Share everything you love about the Chrysler Museum with a gift membership. Perfect for everyone on your list.

The Masterpiece Society

Learn about this innovative group of museum supporters.
Meet the Masterpiece Society

Planned Giving

Help ensure the long-term success of the Museum.
Learn about planned giving

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October 7, 2020

Joyce Scott: Hard Truth in Beauty

Joyce Scott, photo courtesy of John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

 

Joyce Scott’s skilled hands weave narratives of oppression and violence in materials whose sparkling allure subverts their weighty subject matter. A force in the world of art and fine craft for over forty years, she is renowned as much for her unreserved personality as for the exquisitely beaded handiwork that graces collections around the world. Scott’s masterpieces are a testament to her staggering work ethic and lifelong dedication to her creative outlets, which include performance art and song in addition to her fiber and glass practice. Her work in the visual arts ranges from the miniscule to the monumental, but is tied together with a focus on social justice that long predates the movements that have gained traction since the death of George Floyd.

Joyce J. Scott (American, born 1948), Head Shot, 2008, Glassbeads and mold-blown glass with thread and bullet casings, Museum purchase, 2016.36.2

 

Scott’s Head Shot (2008), featured in Come Together, Right Now! The Art of Gathering, is emblematic of her ability to portray brutality with equal parts beautiful craftsmanship and gallows humor. The emerald glass beads that make up the eponymous “head” are woven using a peyote stitch technique, which Scott learned early in her career. The freedom of the stitch allowed Scott to move away from the 2-D surface of fiber work, which she learned from her quilt artist mother Elizabeth Talford Scott at the age of five. She began creating dimensional forms with the magically translucent material, and she’s been pushing the boundaries of what is possible with the form ever since.

In a recent exhibition at Grounds for Sculpture in New Jersey, Scott dedicated an exhibition to Harriet Tubman, with larger-than-life sculptures that incorporated beadwork, resin, glass, mud and time into their construction.  Graffiti Harriet, an monumental outdoor sculpture molded from mud with a glass rifle and beadwork, was designed to melt into the landscape over the duration of the exhibition—speaking to the impermanence of memory and the loss of historical record for women of color. Working at that scale and with that material was newer territory for Scott, but she maintains a fierce dedication to pushing her practice and skills with each new endeavor. “You can make the things that sell and listen to people and be very formulaic, but… I’m going to make the artwork that will make me into a more evolved person, work that challenges me and has a space in this world.”

Joyce Scott, photo courtesy of John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation

 

When asked about the current state of our nation and planet, Scott notes the parallels she sees between our current time and the 1960s and 70s when she was in school. Those years were “like this time in some ways in the sense that people were challenging all kinds of institutions and forms, and making artwork that spoke to that, and building art centers and ways of working with each other.” The pandemic has intensified that energy, in her opinion, and the opportunity that goes along with it. “Right now we’re in a time where we can make a real difference, because this is truly a global assault. We’re being shaken because of the pandemic, and people are just uneasy about the life they’re living.”

Not one to pull a punch in either craftsmanship or conversation, Scott calls our current situation a time of “great soul searching for white people.” She sees technology as a powerful ally. It is both helping to wake America up to the realities of living while Black and bringing up a new generation of savvy, well-connected artists of color.  She recognizes technology as a crucial tool to succeed where traditional activism has failed to gain crucial support from white allies. “White people have to deconstruct these things. Black people have done it forever. We’ve done everything we can to show white people that we are equal. White people have to go to other white people and find ways to explain to them that our system isn’t feasible—that this society cannot continue this way.”

Scott lives and works in Baltimore, Maryland, where she remains active in her community. In addition to an encyclopedic list of awards for achievement in the field of fine craft, she is a 2019 recipient of the Smithsonian Visionary Award and a 2020 awardee of the American Craft Council’s Gold Medal for Consummate Craftsmanship. She is represented by Goya Contemporary in Baltimore; Mobilia Gallery in Cambridge, MA; and Peter Blum Gallery in New York, NY.

Read more from my conversation with Joyce Scott in Glass Art Society’s summer 2020 edition of GASnews.

–Jennifer Hand, Chrysler Museum Gallery Host