{"id":166125,"date":"2023-11-27T11:20:46","date_gmt":"2023-11-27T16:20:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/?p=166125"},"modified":"2023-11-27T13:02:08","modified_gmt":"2023-11-27T18:02:08","slug":"lifesize-dioramas-at-carolee-schneemans-house","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/2023\/11\/27\/lifesize-dioramas-at-carolee-schneemans-house\/","title":{"rendered":"Lifesize Dioramas: At Carolee Schneemann&#8217;s House"},"content":{"rendered":"<div id=\"attachment_166128\" style=\"width: 1011px\" class=\"wp-caption alignnone\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" aria-describedby=\"caption-attachment-166128\" class=\"wp-image-166128 size-large\" src=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/11\/img-4792-1001x1024.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"1001\" height=\"1024\" srcset=\"https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/11\/img-4792-1001x1024.jpg 1001w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/11\/img-4792-293x300.jpg 293w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/11\/img-4792-768x785.jpg 768w, https:\/\/www.theparisreview.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2023\/11\/img-4792.jpg 1060w\" sizes=\"auto, (min-width: 62.5em) 67vw, 100vw\" \/><p id=\"caption-attachment-166128\" class=\"wp-caption-text\">Photograph by Hannah Gold. Carolee Schneeman&#8217;s house near New Paltz.<\/p><\/div>\n<p>In 1965, a stone house near New Paltz was slated for auction. A cousin of the owners, a young and broke painter, begged them to let her buy it with her musician partner. She feared the house, which was limping along, would be torn down. Soon after the artists purchased the house, the painter heard a voice in her dreams: Take a chisel to the concrete stucco, and you will find golden stones beneath; use a crowbar to peel up the linoleum flooring, there are chestnut boards below; hammer at the drop ceilings, there are wide beams above. The painter did as she was told, and found what she was promised. The house began to breathe again. The painter lived in, or perhaps with, the house for more than five decades, long after the musician departed. There were other lovers, and a series of cats\u2014some of the cats were reincarnations of the previous cats. She made films in the rooms and worked in a studio on the second floor. She became, in time, famous. Four years ago, she died in the downstairs bedroom.<\/p>\n<p>This is the story, anyway, as told by the painter, who was known to take creative liberties. Carolee Schneemann named herself. \u201cI made it up,\u201d she said of the surname, \u201cI wanted a big masculine German name.\u201d She was born in 1939, if not 1934. Her birth certificate seems to have been altered with one careful pen stroke, closing off the four into a nine. Census records concur. Still, even last winter, at her first retrospective in the U.K., the Barbican\u2019s <em>Carolee Schneemann: Body Politics<\/em>, the museum materials showed not just the factual date, but the later date, the one Schneemann used when she told her life story.<!--more--><\/p>\n<p>Last December, I saw the house myself. Rachel Churner, the director of the Carolee Schneemann Foundation, picked me up at the station and drove me to Rosendale, New York, where Rachel Helm, who caretakes the house, met us. There was snow on the ground, and we stomped what we could off our boots before the Rachels began my tour. Helm pointed first to the exterior stones Schneeman had uncovered, and then, inside along the walls, the horsehair insulation, coming unstuffed like a child\u2019s favorite plush toy.<\/p>\n<p>The house was built, I learned, in the 1750s. One of three on the street, it was constructed when the French Huguenots made a deal with the Lenape. The Huguenots designed these houses with sloped entries to the basements for livestock to enter\u2014the animals\u2019 body heat would rise, helping to warm the rooms above. In the 1820s, the town became the cement capital of North America, and the industry supported the community until the early twentieth century, when Rosendale cement fell out of favor. The town grew quiet. The house expanded upward and sideways, a patchwork of extensions and renovations, and there was a farm on the property\u2014the farm failed. Finally, the young Schneemann, along with pianist and composer James Tenney, purchased the house.<\/p>\n<p>On the first floor, I saw low-ceilinged rooms enlivened by bright colors: paisley or other swirling patterns clashed joyously; two vibrant shower curtains hung paired on the rod. Directly beneath, along the tub\u2019s base, Schneemann had installed tiles with images of male knights and pages upside-down\u2014\u201cto castrate them,\u201d Helm said.<\/p>\n<p>By the bookshelves upstairs, Churner showed me the notes and indexes Schneemann made in the backs of her books\u2014one listed each reference to cats. On a short stretch of peeling gold wallpaper hung Schneemann\u2019s thermometer collection, and through the next door was the winter bedroom, painted a dusty lilac, a shade Schneemann considered shadow-proof. I recognized the deeply recessed windows from <em>Fuses<\/em>, one of Schneemann\u2019s most famous works.<\/p>\n<p>In the film, the artist and Tenney have sex in the winter bedroom, as the cat Kitch watches. \u201cNo one else had dealt with the image of lovemaking as a core of spontaneous gesture and movement,\u201d Schneemann later wrote,<span style=\"font-size: small;\">\u00a0<\/span>and <em>Fuses<\/em> does chronicle sex as a kind of improvised choreography, with pauses on the bodies in repose, the camera slowly scanning Tenney\u2019s pubic hair the way one might capture the details of a larger painting. In the mid-sixties, of course, this exposure was radical, and the reception of the film, now in the permanent collections of MoMA and the Smithsonian, was mixed: it was alternately degrading, liberating, and even educational.<\/p>\n<p>The purplish hue of the winter bedroom, immortalized in <em>Fuses<\/em>, recurred in the houses\u2019 palette alongside deep yellow, seafoam green, and the bluer end of periwinkle. The downstairs bedroom is floral; the wallpaper was a wedding gift to one of the nineteenth-century tenants. In spots where the design had faded, Schneemann matched the bosc-pear hue with paint and penciled a partial restoration of the branches. Most surfaces throughout the house reflected this level of care: she\u2019d also rubbed paint into the shower\u2019s grout, dyeing it a pleasing blue, and the bathroom wall is decoupaged, as is the kitchen backsplash\u2014the former appears in <em>Fuses<\/em>. The latter is composed of sesame seed, tamari, and Chiquita labels, alongside images of painted food, all sealed in a clear coat of green. Beneath the backsplash, Tenney constructed a cabinet, designed around a single vintage drawer that Schneemann had found on a city street. Tenney also built the kitchen table, a boxy J shape, around a stone pillar in the center. \u201cAnd for him to do carpentry was such a big risk because, you know, his delicate little fingers,\u201d Helm said, rolling her own in the air, as if on a piano.<\/p>\n<p>Walking through the house with the Rachels felt dreamlike; there was something kaleidoscopic about the rooms, the sort of adulthood a child might dream of, in which walls are canvases, and treasures found while walking (feathers, shells, pebbles, nests) are proudly displayed. But it wasn\u2019t juvenile at all; it was skillfully executed, a creative work accomplished by an artist over decades.<\/p>\n<p>Alongside the artist\u2019s found treasures are the rodent offerings of her feline housemates\u2014Schneemann was adamant that the cats were not her pets: Kitch <em>the<\/em> cat, not Kitch <em>her <\/em>cat. I spoke to Alexa Punnamkuzhyil, who once looked after the final cat, La Ni\u00f1a, when Schneemann was away. Punnamkuzhyil is actually allergic to cats, \u201cbut you don\u2019t say no to cat sitting for Carolee Schneemann.\u201d She recalled the feminine energy of the house, the way the dangling crystals on the candleholder refracted rainbows on the walls, and Schneemann\u2019s instructions, Punnamkuzhyil says, \u201cto not disturb any of La Ni\u00f1a\u2019s scatter pieces or any artwork she might make while we were there.\u201d Artwork by La Ni\u00f1a (conceptualized by Schneemann), was even in a gallery show after Schneemann\u2019s death.<\/p>\n<p>Now, La Ni\u00f1a lives elsewhere with a former employee of Schneemann\u2019s, and her artworks, like most of the possessions on the ground floor, have been cleared out, because of coming construction\u2014just structural things, for now. Everything has been photographed and could be restored 1:1, Helm told me as we stood in the kitchen, then frowned at the thought, wondering if this kind of preservation would be too shrine-like.<\/p>\n<p>It\u2019s slippery, this history making that the Foundation engages in\u2014it was the Rachels who told me that Schneemann\u2019s public birth year is fudged, and there were occasionally beats of silence after I asked a question, during which the Rachels would look at each other before answering me, maybe wondering which narrative to let stand. \u201cWell, that\u2019s the story \u2026 \u201d they said more than once, trailing off.<\/p>\n<p>Now, they are deciding how to convert the house into a functional space for an artist residency\u2014an intention Schneemann had for the house after her death. Some of the specifics of the residency were made clear by Schneemann: no painters were to attend, so as to not compete with her legacy (somewhat comically, creators of Schneemann\u2019s better-known media, such as sculpture and performance art, are permitted). But other choices are still open questions, specifically around preserving the house while adapting it for the residents: \u201cWhat can you stabilize and keep secure?\u201d Churner asked, \u201cWhat\u2019s precious and what\u2019s utilizable?\u201d The Rachels grimaced as we discussed last year\u2019s auction of Joan Didion\u2019s belongings; they\u2019re both attached to Schneemann\u2014especially Helm, who was close to the artist in the later years of her life\u2014and want to avoid the pitfalls of fetishization.<\/p>\n<p>The house is also a historic site (Schneemann registered it in the nineties) so possible interventions, even if they are desired, will be limited. Residents, of course, would need a bathroom and kitchen, but the current rooms feel like life-size versions of the artist\u2019s wooden-box dioramas, much too precious to be worn down by regular use. The Rachels, therefore, are proceeding very slowly, crafting the epigraph in Schneemann\u2019s story with a care reminiscent of the grout-painting, decoupaging homeowner herself.<\/p>\n<p>Schneemann, in a late interview, explained that she prioritized the preservation of her home over that of her work. \u201cIt\u2019s my muse, it\u2019s my container, it\u2019s my source of dream and function,\u201d she said. \u201cThe house is my work and all my work is from the house, and my identity for the core of my life is this house.\u201d Such was her attachment that Schneemann wanted to be buried in the yard, but local regulations prohibited it, as the land is a marsh and there wasn\u2019t a space far enough from the building\u2014the cats, however, have graves outside. Schneemann died in her bed downstairs, surrounded by the floral wallpaper she\u2019d so lovingly maintained, and by friends and lovers, La Ni\u00f1a on her chest.<\/p>\n<p>&nbsp;<\/p>\n<p><em><span class=\"il\">Hannah<\/span> <span class=\"il\">Gold<\/span> is a writer based in Brooklyn. She coedits <\/em>Berlin Quarterly<em>\u00a0and teaches writing at Columbia University.<\/em><\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>\u201cSchneemann had installed tiles with images of male knights and pages upside-down\u2014to castrate them.\u201d<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2225,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_acf_changed":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[68637],"tags":[2420,67827],"class_list":["post-166125","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-writers-houses-2","tag-carolee-schneeman","tag-featured"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO Premium plugin v25.4 (Yoast SEO v25.4) - https:\/\/yoast.com\/wordpress\/plugins\/seo\/ -->\n<title>Lifesize Dioramas: At Carolee Schneemann&#039;s House by Hannah Gold<\/title>\n<meta name=\"description\" content=\"November 27, 2023 \u2013 \u201cSchneemann had 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