From
The Boston Globe, Wednesday, December 14, 2011 by Cate McQuaid
"Gender Bending"
Hannah Barrett's paintings and drawings in "Family Jewels"
at Howard Yezerski Gallery are comical and deadly serious. Barrett
has for years made portraits of fictional characters of blended
genders. The first I saw were mash-ups of her parents. For the
newest ones, she tosses together Adolf Hitler and Queen Elizabeth
II--two very different icons of power in the 20th century.
This show is all about connotations of power. Each piece begins
as a collage, and evolves into a drawing, then a painting. The
subjects are the same DNA, but they all look quite different,
as Barrett shuffles facial features and elements of physique and
costume. For the backgrounds, she borrows from Tintoretto and
John Constable, not to mention Hitler's own watercolors. In almost
all the works, Barrett unveils the hermaphroditic subjects' genitalia
amid the jodhpurs, uniforms and gowns.
"Joyous Entry" depicts a figure executing a demure royal
wave, with petite hands in creamy gloves. The figure, on horseback
(and with an open fly), wears Hitler's uniform shirt and sports
his mustache, but also has donned glittering rubies. The brown
hair is cropped short, but bracketed by gray curls.
The funniest bit, in every work, is the face. These characters
look awkward, distorted, and prim, yet they are always somehow
trying.
"Fidei Defensor" shows a largely masculine character,
with Hitler's nose and mustache over a broad neck, draped in fur.
The chest is bare and muscular, yet there are breasts and the
genitals pop out of a white skirt. In the background, Barrett
has painted a glacier from a Hitler painting. One of Queen Elizabeth's
Faberge eggs perches on the desk in the background.
It's charmed imagery. Simply to expose a royal's genitals has
an emperor's-new-clothes vibe. It nakedly acknowledges the historic
emphasis on a monarch's fertility too. In making these figures
androgynous, Barrett also elevates to high rank people born that
way, who hide, pass, or surgically alter what nature gave them.
Her subjects are floridly both male and female, affirming of all
possibilities.