Suzi Ferrer

Suzi Ferrer (May 24, 1940  April 6, 2006) (born Susan Nudelman, also known as Sasha Ferrer, was a visual artist based in San Juan, Puerto Rico from the mid-1960s to 1975. She is known for her transgressive, irreverent, avant-garde, art brut and feminist work.[1][2]

Suzi Ferrer
Portrait of Suzi Ferrer behind "Plarotics" panel.
Born
Susan Nudelman

(1940-05-24)May 24, 1940
Brooklyn, New York, US
DiedApril 6, 2006(2006-04-06) (aged 65)
Spouses
  • Miguel A. Ferrer (1962-1975)
  • Stephen Goldsmith (1984-2006)
Websitewww.suziferrer.info

Biography

Suzi was the eldest child of Ruth Epstein Susser and Samuel Nudelman, both second generation Austrian, Polish and Belarusian Jewish immigrants. Sasha, as her parents referred to her, graduated from Jamaica High School, New York, in 1958, where she excelled and was active in the drama department. Her main interest was acting and she hoped to make a career in television.[1]

In the summer of 1958, Nudelman enrolled in the Fine Arts program at Cornell University, graduating in 1962. She exhibited her work at the Andrew Dickson White Museum of Art (now the Herbert F. Johnson Museum) and the Franklin Gallery, both on the university campus. While at Cornell, she also continued acting, appearing in several campus plays as well as a brief stint on Broadway in The Pajama Game in 1959.[3]

After graduating, Sasha married Puerto Rican Miguel A. Ferrer, whom she met while he was studying for his MBA at Cornell University. They moved to New York City, visiting galleries and buying contemporary art. They lived a nomadic life, traveling between New York and San Juan during the first years of their marriage. With their daughter, Ilena (b. 1964), the Ferrers settled permanently in Puerto Rico in the mid-1960s. Their son, Miguel, was born in Puerto Rico in 1969.

By the mid-1970s, Ferrer stopped producing art and delved into other creative pursuits. She relocated to San Francisco, and as "Sasha Ferrer", she worked as a cultural manager, graphic designer, publicist, and community liaison for the San Francisco Arts Commission Neighborhood Arts Program. She offered workshops on television camera techniques and worked as a consultant for the marketing firm Beyl & Boyd. In the late 1970s, she was hired to do a study of the physics and psychology of color to design the corporate image for the Vancouver Canucks hockey team.[4]

In late 1979, she began her work in television at Videowest, a San Francisco based  alternative theme show where she worked as a producer, writer, actress, and director, meeting her future husband, Stephen Goldsmith, in the process.  In 1982, she created and directed the television pilot for young people, Smarkus and Company,[5] leading to her move to Los Angeles in 1983.  Once in LA, Ferrer initially worked as an executive at the Disney Channel and in subsequent years worked at Endemol, Triage Productions, Warner Bros. and The Landsburg Company, the latter producing her TV movie In Defense of a Married Man[6].  In 1987 she was stricken with breast cancer, a disease that came and went over the remainder of her life.  Drawing on her own experience, Ferrer wrote and produced the NBC documentary Destined to Live,[7] that chronicled the recovery journey of a hundred breast cancer patients, for which she received a 1990 Humanitas Prize.  However, 19 years after her initial cancer diagnosis, and after many periods of remission, she relapsed, passing away in Los Angeles in April 2006, just short of her 66th birthday.

Art

Ferrer's artistic career lasted only ten years, but they were very productive. She participated in five individual exhibitions, more than fifteen collective exhibitions in galleries in New York and San Juan, and three international biennials.[8] Parallel to her artistic career, in the early seventies she began graduate studies in psychology at the University of Puerto Rico, Río Piedras Campus. In 1976 she presented her thesis "A Theoretical Discussion of Creative Process and Exploratory Study of the Creative Puerto Rican", in which she interviewed 12 creatives who worked in Puerto Rico to listen to their creative process. That same year, Antonio Molina, art critic for the newspaper El Mundo, included Ferrer in the artist biographies section in volume VIII of the Gran Enciclopedia de Puerto Rico.

In the 1970s, Ferrer produced drawings, prints and complex, immersive art installations which used acrylic or Plexiglas, as support for her works. Introduced in the 1930s, by the 1960s Plexiglas was being employed by contemporary artists internationally as a material that inherently referenced that moment in time.[9] Furthermore, Plexiglas’ transparency provided an eloquent visual for Ferrer’s images, whose composition was designed to be overlayed with other drawings or illustrated panels, so they can be jostled together and seen simultaneously through transparent layers. This illusion creates an interesting play between the apparent depth in the composition versus the flatness of the drawing. In addition, because Plexiglas is slightly reflective, viewers perceive their own reflection, implicating their bodies as part of the work and adding another layer of an imaged human body. Viewers can also see through Plexiglas layers, potentially perceiving other bodies behind the images.[10]

Ferrer used drawing as an act of defiance against conventional imagery of the body, sexuality, and desire. Like other female artists of the time, Ferrer's work became figurative, with deliberate breast, vaginal, and penile imagery, exploring female empowerment, gender roles, female desire, and pleasure. Pop art became the ideal platform for navigating these issues: Ferrer juxtaposed comic book superhero images, catechism textbook illustrations, Chris Foss' drawings published in The Joy of Sex, illustrations by children’s author Richard Scarry, and art-historical references to create images critical of patriarchal society. Her complex and critical images flipped the canon and focused on the female gaze — a women’s desiring gaze on a male object of sexual desire — thereby celebrating self-assured femininity.[1]

Almost fifty years after her pieces were first exhibited in galleries in Puerto Rico, art historian Melissa M. Ramos Borges organized and curated the first retrospective of the artist.[2] With the title Suzi Ferrer, the exhibition opened in September 2021 at the Miramar Museum of Art and Design (MADMi).[11]

Individual exhibitions

2021 Suzi Ferrer, retrospective exhibit curated by Melissa M. Ramos Borges, Museo de Arte y Diseño de Miramar (MADMi), San Juan, Puerto Rico.[11]

1975 WestBroadway Gallery, New York.[12][13]

1973 WestBroadway Gallery, New York.[14]

1971 Plarotics, La Casa del Arte, Viejo San Juan, Puerto Rico.

1969 La Casa del Arte, Old San Juan, Puerto Rico.[15]

1966 La Casa del Arte, Old San Juan, Puerto Rico.[16]

Collective exhibitions

2019 Anarquía y dialéctica en el deseo: géneros y marginalidad en Puerto Rico/Anarchy, dialectics and genres in the MAC Parte I, Museo de Arte Contemporáneo de Puerto Rico, Santurce.[17][18]

1980 Grabados Puertorriqueños de la ESSO Standard Oil Company, Biblioteca del Colegio Regional de Arecibo.

1976 Colectiva Gráfica Latinoamericana, Museo de Historia, Antropología y Arte (MHAA), Universidad de Puerto Rico, Recinto de Río Piedras

1975 Dibujo y collage, Centro Nacional de las Artes, Viejo San Juan, Puerto Rico.

1974 Inaugural exhibition, Centro Nacional de las Artes, Viejo San Juan, Puerto

Mujeres Puertorriqueñas, La Galería, Viejo San Juan

Puerto Rican Prints, organized by the Pratt Graphic Center, New York.

1973 Primavera, Galería Colibrí, Viejo San Juan, Puerto Rico[19]

New York Artists WestBroadway, Rundetårn, Copenhagen, Denmark.

Puerto Rican Prints: An Exxon Collection, traveling show[20]

Puerto Rican Prints, Galería Colibrí, Viejo San Juan, Puerto Rico Housatonic Museum of Art, Housatonic Community College, Bridgeport, Connecticut

1969 Puerto Rican Art, New York

1968 Museo de Historia, Antropología y Arte (MHAA), Universidad de Puerto Rico

1966 Experimentos serigráficos del taller ICP, Galería Colibrí, Viejo San Juan[21]

1965 Galería Campeche, Ateneo Puertorriqueño

Biennials

1974 3ra Bienal del Grabado Latinoamericano de San Juan, Convento de los Dominicos, Viejo San Juan, Puerto Rico

1973 XII Bienal de São Paulo, Puerto Rican delegation, Brasil[22]

1972 IX Biennale Internationale d'Art de Menton, France[23]

2nda Bienal del Grabado Latinoamericano de San Juan, Convento de los Dominicos

Collections

  • Instituto de Cultura Puertorriqueña
  • ESSO Standard Oil Collection
  • EXXON
  • MHAA[24]
  • MADMi

Distinctions

Ganadora - medio gráfico, IBEC, 1967.[25]

10 Best Dressed Women in Puerto Rico, The San Juan Star, 1968.

10 Best Dressed Women in Puerto Rico, The San Juan Star, 1969[26]

Special Award Winner, 15th Annual Humanitas Prize, 1990[27]

Selected publications

Bloch, Peter. Painting and Sculpture of Puerto Ricans. New York: Plus Ultra Educational Publishers, 1978. (includes several black and white plates of Suzi Ferrer's work)

Fernández, Jesse. "Installations at the Colibrí." The San Juan Star, May 27, 1973, 14-15. (includes plates and description of her 1973 installation Portrait in Six Dimensions)

Fernández Méndez, Eugenio y Manuel Cárdenas Ruiz. "‘Instalaciones’ Del Mundo Absurdo En La Colibrí." Avance, June 18, 1973, 44-44. (includes plates and description of her 1973 installation Portrait in Six Dimensions)

Fullana Acosta, Mariela. "Redescubriendo el arte y la vida de Suzi Ferrer." El Nuevo Día, October 12, 2021. (Review published in Puerto Rican newspaper of 2021 retrospective exhibition at Museo de Arte y Diseño de Miramar)

López Pérez, Stephanie. "Suzi Ferrer: Deconstruye estereotipos a través del arte feminista." 90 Grados, 18 September 2021. (Review in digital Puerto Rican publication of 2021 retrospective exhibition at Museo de Arte y Diseño de Miramar)

Molina, Antonio. "Fichero Biográfico." In Gran Enciclopedia de Puerto Rico, edited by Vicente Báez. Madrid: Ediciones R, September 1976. (includes several black and white and color plates of Ferrer's work)

———. "¿Manifesto De Arte U Obra Feminista?" El Mundo, June 19, 1973, 11A. (Review of installation 'Portrait in Six Dimensions' when first exhibited in the Galería Colibrí in 1973)

Pérez González, Aisha. "Arte, Vanguardia y Feminismo: Vida y Obra de Suzi Ferrer." B.A., Universidad de Puerto Rico, Recinto de Río Piedras, 2018.

Ramos Borges, Melissa M. "Omisión O Censura: Una Revisión De La Vanguardia Artística En Puerto Rico, 1960-1970." Ph. D., Universidad Autónoma de Madrid, 2019. (First comprehensive study of avant garde art in Puerto Rico, contextualizes Ferrer's work with her contemporaries working on the island)

———. "Unos Comentarios En Torno a La Obra Experimental De Suzi Ferrer." Paper presented at the VIII Coloquio de investigación de historia de las mujeres: Mujer en las artes, Universidad de Puerto Rico, Utuado Campus, March 20, 2019. (Author analyses installation 'Portrait in Six Dimmensions' using Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex as theoretical framework)

Rodríguez, Jorge. "Suzi Ferrer y el desafío al convencionalismo fememino." El Vocero, September 21, 2021. (Review published in Puerto Rican newspaper of 2021 retrospective exhibition at Museo de Arte y Diseño de Miramar)

Ruiz de la Mata, Ernesto Jaime. "Suzi Ferrer." The San Juan Star, September 19, 1971, 10-11. (published text is an interview with Ferrer, with several black and white plates of her work)

References

  1. Ramos Borges, Melissa M. (June 2021). "Lost and Found: Assessments of Suzi Ferrer's Decade-Long Career in Puerto Rico". Vision Doble. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  2. Sánchez, Joaquín Jesús (February 15, 2022). "Critics Pick - Suzi Ferrer at MADMi". Artforum.com. Archived from the original on February 15, 2022. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  3. Belsky, Elizabeth R. (May 8, 1959). "Octagon Plans Musical Shoe For Weekend". The Cornell Daily Sun.
  4. "Canucks wardrobe: A history from hideous to splendour". vancouversun. Retrieved March 14, 2022.
  5. Ferrer, Sasha, Smarkus and Company (Documentary, Family, Fantasy), Blackhawk Productions, retrieved March 14, 2022
  6. Oliansky, Joel (October 14, 1990), In Defense of a Married Man (Crime, Drama), Landsburg Company, retrieved March 14, 2022
  7. Otto, Linda (October 12, 1988), Destined to Live (Documentary), retrieved March 14, 2022
  8. Ramos Borges, Melissa M. (September 2021). "Suzi Ferrer: A Woman's Work". MADMi.
  9. Atkinson, Tracy (1969). A Plastic Presence. Milwaukee Art Center.
  10. Ramos Borges, Melissa M. (September 2021). Suzi Ferrer: A Woman's Work. MADMi.
  11. "Suzi Ferrer". MADMi. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  12. "The Westbroadway". The San Juan Star. February 9, 1975.
  13. "Arts and Leisure Guide". New York Times. February 2, 1975. p. Section X, Page 3. Retrieved March 7, 2022 via TimesMachine.
  14. "Suzi Ferrer in New York". The San Juan Star. January 28, 1973.
  15. "Suzi Ferrer". Museo de Historia, Antropología y Arte. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  16. "Pintura de SUZI FERRER". Museo Historia, Antropología y Arte, UPRRP. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  17. Torres Arzola, Raquel (March 5, 2020). "Anarquía y dialéctica en el deseo: géneros y marginalidad en Puerto Rico". Artishock Revista de Arte Contemporáneo. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  18. "Anarquía, dialéctica y géneros en el MAC". December 16, 2019.
  19. "Primavera". Museo de Historia, Antropología y Arte. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  20. "La colección gráfica ESSO de Puerto Rico". ICAA Documents. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  21. "La estampa serigráfica en Puerto Rico". ISSUU. Museo de Historia, Antropología y Arte. November 13, 1987. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  22. "12a Bienal de São Paulo". ISSUU. Bienal de São Paulo. December 2008. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
  23. "IX Biennale Internationale d'Art de Menton". Google Books. 1972.
  24. "Carteles Suzi Ferrer". MHAA. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  25. "Exposición Arte Ibec Premia 5 Participantes". El Mundo. October 27, 1967.
  26. Maldonado, Penny (December 19, 1969). "Best Dressed Women Honored at a Cocktail Party". The San Juan Star.
  27. Haithman, Diane (July 7, 1989). "ABC, CBS Top Humanitas Prize Winners". LA Times. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
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