Natalie Frank

Natalie Frank

Blanton Museum of Art

Natalie Frank, All Fur III, 2011–14. Gouache and chalk pastel on Arches paper, 22 x 30 inches. 

July 15, 2015

Natalie Frank
The Brothers Grimm

July 11–November 15, 2015

Blanton Museum of Art
200 East Martin Luther King Junior Boulevard
Austin, TX 78712

www.blantonmuseum.org

The Blanton Museum of Art at the University of Texas at Austin presents Natalie Frank: The Brothers Grimm, an exhibition of more than 36 gouache and pastel drawings by artist Natalie Frank, a New York-based Austin native. Organized by The Drawing Center in New York, this presentation explores the 19th-century fairy tales of Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm, including well-known stories such as “Cinderella” and “Snow White,” and more obscure tales such as “The Lettuce Donkey” and “The Ungrateful Son.” Her drawings function as a feminist reimagining of the stories. In them, Frank renders key scenes from each fairy tale, investigating the ways in which they address gender, sexuality, and complex familial dynamics. Drawing upon the history of illustrated books, figuration, and personal and political narrative, Frank’s drawings represent the largest collection of Grimm’s fairy tales ever illustrated by a fine artist.

“Natalie Frank shares with us her striking vision for the original folk tales by the Brothers Grimm, which are complex and at times very intense,” remarks Blanton director Simone Wicha. “Her vibrant and evocative drawings will change the way we understand the fairy tales that so many of us grew up with and will surely capture the curiosity of art lovers and literary buffs alike. We are thrilled to partner with The Drawing Center to bring this exhibition to the Blanton.”

Written between 1812 and 1857 and subsequently translated into more than 160 languages, the Grimm’s fairy tales are known and loved by children the world over. What is less known is that these stories were originally intended for adults, with later editions expunged of sexuality and violence. Even lesser known is that while the Grimm Brothers gathered and adapted these stories for print, the stories were first oral tales that were produced, collected, and shared largely by women. For this body of work, Frank uses the original, often graphic versions of the narratives as a point of departure, examining the vast emotional, physical, and intellectual transformation of the stories’ female characters. In an interview with The Wall Street Journal, Frank described delving into the early, unsanitized editions where women held almost no power over their fates. In these stories, the princesses, hags, and witches seemed complex; according to Ms. Frank, “I started making drawings that could reflect these characters’ vulnerabilities and strengths.”

A virtuosic painter, she has chosen to work exclusively and for the first time in gouache and chalk pastel. Her decision to translate the Grimm stories into drawings is fitting, given the tradition of illustration in these narratives: although the first editions were not illustrated, a third Grimm brother illustrated subsequent editions as part of a larger sanitization of the tales that attempted to increase their broad popularity and appeal to children. Many of the stories we identify most closely with the Grimms today we associate with illustrations that have denied these stories’ dark and original forms. 

Alongside this exhibition, Frank’s first book, published by Damiani and designed by Marian Bantjes, explores 36 of these original tales through a collection of 75 color drawings, accompanied by hand-drawn title pages, borders, and drawings throughout the book. Using translations by fairy tale scholar Jack Zipes, the book also includes an essay by Drawing Center Senior Curator Claire Gilman, a conversation between the artist and Tony-award winning director Julie Taymor, and an essay by art historian Linda Nochlin. In her essay, Nochlin writes, “Frank’s versions of the familiar and not-so-familiar tales are un-syrupy and anti-Disneyesque, sometimes gruesome. Cruelty and crude eroticism, magic and bizarre fantasy, mark their folkloristic roots; weirdness and irrationality distance them from both everyday life and the moralism of happily ever after.” 

The Blanton has recently acquired seven works from Frank’s “Brothers Grimm” series: four drawings dedicated to Cinderella and three devoted to Rapunzel. This exhibition marks the first time that they will be presented at the museum.

 
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