Bob McClain had had enough of Karin Broker’s waffling.
“Why are you so angry?” he asked.
So, the Houston artist and Rice University printmaking professor, known for her collages, text-based work and prints and interest in gender roles, seized on her anger and a sense of purpose.
She jumped off the fence, the latest move from the Pennsylvania native, who received a BFA from the University of Iowa and an MFA from the University of Wisconsin in Madison. The 1994 Texas Artist of the Year retired from Rice, where she was also chair of visual and dramatic arts.
Two works from that transformative period seen in earlier shows are among those on display in the solo exhibition my small circus at the Art Museum of South Texas in Corpus Christi through April 9th.
The works include sculptures developed over time beginning in 2014 with the show Karin Broker: damn girls at McClain’s gallery. She introduced the Girls, made from found objects, which sit among those collages culled from meticulous research about violence against women from the Spanish Inquisition to contemporary Houston Chronicle stories about women murdered by men. and about many woman who heroically survived and flourished throughout history.
She was rewriting stories, bringing justice to the women by making them the protagonists.
“[The story] was always about John Smith. He was upset that she drove his car or didn’t do something right. He did not get any kudos from me. He didn’t get any press from me. I switched the story because the woman killed is the person killed,” she said.
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Karin Broker, Bottle Girl. Courtesy of the artist.
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Karin Broker, Fighting Pretty. Courtesy of the artist.
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Karin Broker, Fight Girl. Courtesy of the artist.
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Karin Broker, Girl with Balls. Courtesy of the artist.
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Karin Broker
Drumming girl, 2022
cast metal, porcelain, buttons, pins, wire
13 1/2 x 5 1/2 x 5 1/2 inches
Courtesy of the artist.
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Karin Broker
Always sorry girl, 2020
porcelain, SAD iron, beads, paint, miscellaneous items, wire, steel base
28 1/2 x 15 x 14 inches
Courtesy of the artist.
“In this exhibition, I embrace thorny girl stuff, family violence, sexual abuse, birth conundrums and apathy towards my dance in the center ring of my own gender circus,” she said.
Drawings Fighting Pretty and Picture Pretty hang prominently among works, made between 2021 and 2022. A book featuring each girl’s story, written by Broker, accompanies the show, a continuation of her layering of text and images about women, seen as far back as her 2005 A Mad Girl’s Small Notes and 2006 Mad Girl, both at McClain.
“Each story has something to do with the girls,” she said.
With Bottle Girl, for instance, two legs hold up a torso made with bottles and are surrounded by a rusty metal cage.
The sculptures of what she affectionately called her women and girls depart from printmaking, which she also taught at Rice until retiring in 2021.
She’s confident, however, of the message.
“My hope is that my screams give strength, understanding and resiliency to those within hearing range. And in the middle of all this visual shouting, I hope my pieces also stand proud and revel in a heap-load of optimism, all the while dancing between heavy doses of beauty,” she said. “I want you to look at my girls, let’s say all my pieces and say, ‘Whoa, they’re beautiful, right?’”
—JAMES RUSSELL