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Judybeth Greene
Painting messages of peace
BY MITCHELL TROPIN
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Photo: Julie Wiatt
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Judybeth Greene is hard
at work most of the week as an attorney with the Justice Department's
Civil Rights Division, busy protecting the voting rights of
all Americans. But one day a week, she puts aside the law
books and interoffice e-mails, replacing them with canvas,
paints, and whimsy. She transforms into one of Takoma Park's
more thoughtful artists, whose work touches on couples, relationships,
the Middle East conflict, feminism, and Judaism.
In her studio on Willow Avenue, canvases cover every part
of the room. With just a cursory glance around, the strength
and expressiveness of Greene's work is cleara gigantic
pomegranate catches the eye, as does a large nude of a slightly
zaftig woman. Depictions of violent images from the Middle
East conflict force the viewer to stop and examine.
Greene has developed a reputation in the Washington area
for her art on political themes and feminist issues. As an
attorney with the Justice Department, she spends her days
enforcing the Voting Rights Act, working with other attorneys
and analysts who review changes in election procedures in
states covered by the act.
Greene helps determine whether proposed changes in redistricting,
polling places, voter registration procedures, special elections,
or language diminish voting rights or discriminate.
Greene says her department's range of work has changed greatly
over the years, as the political and social tone of America
has changed. But the commitment of Greene and her colleagues
remains.
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Courtesy of Judybeth Greene
"Irises and Red Sun"
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"We are still able to do some very good work,"
she says.
A 13-year veteran of the department, Greene is proud of her
accomplishments, such as bringing to trial one of the first
cases on enforcing the right to register to vote at state
motor vehicle offices.
But Greene also has made impressive contributions with her
art.
A large part of Greene's work shows relationships from a
woman's viewpoint. She recently created a series of seven
drawings that tell the story of a couple meeting and coming
together (with one panel showing the male lover freaking out
over commitment issues). The series has two alternative endings:
in one, the woman dances happily with the man; in the other,
she's dancing happily alone.
Greene has found that seemingly insignificant creative decisions
produce amazing reactions. A recent work, "Woman with
Healing Scar," was conceived as an image of a woman recovering
from heartbreak. Over the heart, Greene literally sewed a
patch of canvas, but the sewing was not completedone
corner was left undone. Once on display, people were unable
to resist the urge to pick at the canvas patch to see if anything
was underneath. Finally she had to sew the patch on completely.
One woman who visited the display saw an entirely different
message in the piece. She approached Greene and asked to purchase
it, explaining that her daughter had been going through chemotherapy
for breast cancer.
"The painting was a healing gift from the mother to
the daughter." Greene says, adding that it moved her
that her "art was able to touch somebody in another way."
Usually there is a direct link between the events in Greene's
life and the subjects of her art, such as with her experience
of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. That morning,
Greene was forced to evacuate her Justice Department offices
in downtown Washington. But instead of heading directly home,
she went to Mimi's, a restaurant near Dupont Circle. The owner,
Andy "Anas" Shallal, an Arab-American, has been
a tremendous booster of Greene's work, as well as a good friend.
As the news of the day came across the restaurant's television
sets, Greene found her view of the world changed forever.
"After being evacuated from my office," she says,
"
trying to 'paint a message of peace' felt
like a completely different endeavor."
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Courtesy of Judybeth Greene
"Prayer for Wise Leadership"
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The day's events spurred Greene to take action. Influenced
by Jewish cooking author Joan Nathan, who has used food to
facilitate discussions, Greene and Shallal searched through
the Torah to find food items that both Arabs and Jews share.
They started the "Food for Peace" project after
finding what they call the "seven staples"barley,
dates, figs, grapes, olives, pomegranates, and wheat. Shallal
used the items to create "peace meals" in the form
of appetizers, while Greene created a series of prints that
featuring the staples alone and in combinations. Their hope
was to facilitate understanding and discussion by bringing
together people from both cultures, over food familiar to
all of them.
"Andy is very passionate about getting people together
to talk," she says.
The Food for Peace project then led to one of Greene's most
impressive works: her "Wall," which is a portable
plexiglas and wooden version of the Wailing Wall in Jerusalem,
an ancient remnant from Biblical times where visitors leave
small slips of paper containing prayers in its cracks and
crevices.
Greene's wall was created in connection with a project started
by Ari Roth, director of Theatre J at the D.C. Jewish Community
Center. Roth was staging "Via Doloras," a play by
British playwright David Hare dealing with Israeli-Arab relations.ºRoth
was holding a series of discussions about the Middle East
situation and Greene was asked to contribute. She placed "the
Wall," the size of a large suitcase, in the theatre lobby.
To Greene's surprise, people started placing their own prayer
slips in every single crack of Greene's creation.
What impressed Greene was how everyone who saw The Wall wanted
it "to be their private place to speak with God."
Similar to the Vietnam Memorial, Greene's wall can impart
a sense of intimacy to a visitor, even in a large crowd.
"The Wall" continues to be circulated to groups
and places. Time and again, people stop and place their thoughts
in it.
Greene's experience as a yoga student led to a series of
"Goddess" paintings that reflect Greene's love of
the female figure. Attending yoga classes in Baltimore, Greene
was taken with the power and grace of different yoga positions
demonstrated by the instructor. But what made the poses most
captivating were their secondary meanings.
"[They] gave me a metaphor to expand on language, and
to expand on culture," Greene says. "I also found
elements that went from one culture to another. For example,
the Mother Goddess pose is a birthing position in Africa.
I found the pose created a strong image about power and balance
that was very centering."
Born in Boston, Greene was raised in Needham, one of the
city's suburbs. The oldest of three siblings, she grew up
in a Jewish family that was active in the local reform congregation.
Her exposure and interest in art began earlyshe remembers
her parents taking the family downtown to Boston's Museum
of Fine Arts, and as a teenager, art teachers encouraged her
to take advanced classes. By high school, she was taking college-level
courses. As a harbinger of things to come, in one class Greene
created a two-story long macramé hanging with "Shalom,"
the Hebrew word for peace, woven into the design.
Greene's pursuit of an art career came to an abrupt end when
she told her father that a local art college wanted her to
enroll.
"My father's response was quite emphatic: 'you
are not going to art school,'" she says.
Later he softened his position by offering to pay for either
law or art school if she finished college. Greene went to
Union College in Schenectady, N.Y. as a pre-law student, and
put art on the back burner. The coup de grace to her thwarted
art ambitions was an art class in which the instructor viciously
attacked her work.
"He excoriated me," she says.
From that point on, Greene focused on the law. "I made
the decision that even if I had the chance to go to art school,
I would rather go to law school, because law, with its logic,
had a certain appeal," she says. "I would rather
have someone criticize my logic than my art, because
I
couldn't argue or protect myself if they made a comment about
my art. It was if they were attacking methere was no
separation."
Greene devoted herself to becoming a lawyer, attending George
Washington University's law center, which brought her to the
Washington area. After graduation, Greene joined the Federal
Elections Commission, doing enforcement work. She had pretty
much stopped doing artuntil she came to a realization.
"I was pleased with my job, but I was depressed as hell.
After work I would come home and sit on the floor, finding
it hard to get motivated to move," she says. "To
get myself activated, I took a drama class. But then I realized
that by stopping the art classes, I had cut off a part of
my bodya limb. It was that fundamental."
Greene started taking art classes. Then she came up with
the idea of combining her vacations with her renewed interest
in art. She took week-long classes in Maine, Vermont, and
New Mexico, where she visited the Santa Fe Ghost Ranch that
Georgia O'Keeffe often painted. Moreover, she rediscovered
the joys of being an artist.
In 1988, after returning from one of her vacations, Greene
attended the Maryland Institute of Art in Baltimore, the only
learning establishment in the area that is devoted entirely
to art studies. Greene thrived in an environment where something
always seemed to be happening in the classes and the hallways.
Working out a compromise schedule with her superiors, Greene
commuted from Baltimore while taking a full schedule of classes.
Since graduating, Greene's life continues to be divided between
law and art.
Although her art has reflected political and social issues,
Greene acknowledges that a recent event in her own life has
caused a great shift in the direction of her work. Last December,
she married Ron Fagnani.
Since the wedding, much of her new work features couples
in playful, Chagall-inspired dances, embracing while floating
freely in a blue environment.
When asked if the blissfulness reflected in her art was a
result of her marriage, all she can say is "bingo."
The couples-related creations have the thread of humor that
has always been an element of Greene's work. The titles include
"Wedding Smooch" and "Honey I Love You, Let's
Redecorate."
"I love putting sarcasm into my work. I like the interaction
between that and the people who buy the art," she says.
"They have their own story that goes with the art."
For more information on Judybeth Greene's
artwork, see her website, www.judybeth.com.
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