Maria Kalman Finds Truth In The Mess ~ The New Yorker

It was the early days of the pandemic and the artist and writer Maira Kalman had taken refuge in Saugerties, New York, with her son and daughter-in-law. She was at the farmers’ market in Kingston when inspiration struck. “I saw this woman holding a giant cabbage, and I was, like: that’s it. I’m done. I know what I’m doing now,” the artist recalls. “The woman wasn’t exactly thrilled that I wanted to photograph her, but I asked politely and respectfully, and she agreed.”

When Kalman looked at her archives, she noticed that she had a large collection of photographs of women holding things. “I started thinking about the responsibilities that women hold, the nature of being a woman, and what it means to contain the complexity of life,” she said. The idea prompted her to start painting. “When you paint, things reveal themselves. You see what’s on your mind and what’s important. I relate to the paper in an emotional way. I want there to be surprises; I want there to be mistakes, and I want there to be problems. It’s more interesting to me that way. There’s truth in the mess.”

The project that germinated from that encounter in the market, “Women Holding Things,” gathers dozens of new images and some previously unpublished ones. The paintings have been collected in a new book, which will come out next month, and will also be on display at Mary Ryan Gallery, from October 6th to November 12th. ♦

This is drawn from “Women Holding Things.”

A girl in a white dress holds a violin.
Two women in yellow dresses walk side by side.
A man embraces a small girl and holds a cigarette.
A woman holds a ukulele and stands in a field near a large cherry tree.
A black hat rests on the seat of a chair.
A woman in a red jacket balances a bundle of grass on her head.
Two women have tea near a piano.
A portrait of a woman in a green dress.
A woman carries a boulder in a field.
A woman holds a chicken.

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