Betsy Damon
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Betsy Damon (born 1940) is an American artist whose work has been influenced by her activism in women's, gay, and environmental rights.


Early life and Family

Damon was born in 1940 to George Huntington Damon and Harriet Atkins. Damon is an aunt to journalist
Arwa Damon Arwa Damon (born September 19, 1977) is an American journalist who is a senior international correspondent for CNN, based in Istanbul. From 2003, she covered the Middle East as a freelance journalist, before joining CNN in 2006. She is also pre ...
, as well as a great-granddaughter of investment banker Henry Hornblower, founder of
Hornblower & Weeks Hornblower & Weeks was an investment banking and brokerage firm founded by Henry Hornblower and John W. Weeks in 1888. At its peak in the late 1970s, Hornblower ranked eighth among member firms of the New York Stock Exchange in number of retail ...
. She spent her childhood living in Istanbul.


Career

Damon received her master's degree from
Columbia University Columbia University (also known as Columbia, and officially as Columbia University in the City of New York) is a private research university in New York City. Established in 1754 as King's College on the grounds of Trinity Church in Manhatt ...
in 1966. She then traveled to Germany but returned to the United States in 1968 where she learned of the
Women's Movement The feminist movement (also known as the women's movement, or feminism) refers to a series of social movements and political campaigns for radical and liberal reforms on women's issues created by the inequality between men and women. Such is ...
from American artist
Joyce Kozloff Joyce Kozloff (born 1942) is an American artist whose politically engaged work has been based on cartography since the early 1990s. Kozloff was one of the original members of the Pattern and Decoration movement and was an early artist in the 1970 ...
. In 1972 Damon attended
Womanhouse ''Womanhouse'' (January 30 – February 28, 1972) was a feminist art installation and performance space organized by Judy Chicago and Miriam Schapiro, co-founders of the California Institute of the Arts ( CalArts) Feminist Art Program and was ...
. After this visit, she began creating street art performances in
New York City New York, often called New York City or NYC, is the List of United States cities by population, most populous city in the United States. With a 2020 population of 8,804,190 distributed over , New York City is also the L ...
. Her performance, ''The 7000 Year Old Woman'' in 1977 in New York City, addressed feminist themes of violence and oppression through a ritualistic performance. Damon has participated in a number of exhibitions and performances and her work has been featured in exhibitions at the
Metropolitan Museum of Art The Metropolitan Museum of Art of New York City, colloquially "the Met", is the largest art museum in the Americas. Its permanent collection contains over two million works, divided among 17 curatorial departments. The main building at 1000 ...
. She was a founding member of the
Women's Caucus for Art The Women's Caucus for Art (WCA), founded in 1972, is a non-profit organization based in New York City, which supports women artists, art historians, students, educators, and museum professionals. The WCA holds exhibitions and conferences to promo ...
and received the Mid-Life Career Award from the organization in 1989. She won the Arts and Healing Network Award in 2000. At the age of 50, Damon changed the focus of her art to center on water, the conservation and protection of water and how it impacts society. Her efforts in activist art influenced the annual
San Antonio River The San Antonio River is a major waterway that originates in central Texas in a cluster of springs in midtown San Antonio, about 4 miles north of downtown, and follows a roughly southeastern path through the state. It eventually feeds into the ...
clean up, as well as educated many people on the importance of water. She is an international water artist who primarily focuses on ecological works. Her work raised awareness in China as well, her best known project being ''The Living Water Garden'' in the city of
Chengdu Chengdu (, ; Simplified Chinese characters, simplified Chinese: 成都; pinyin: ''Chéngdū''; Sichuanese dialects, Sichuanese pronunciation: , Standard Chinese pronunciation: ), Chinese postal romanization, alternatively Romanization of Chi ...
in
Sichuan Province Sichuan (; zh, c=, labels=no, ; zh, p=Sìchuān; alternatively romanized as Szechuan or Szechwan; formerly also referred to as "West China" or "Western China" by Protestant missions) is a province in Southwest China occupying most of the ...
, China, the first water-themed ecological park in urban China. In 2009, Damon was named as a
Women's History Month Women's History Month is an annual declared month that highlights the contributions of women to events in history and contemporary society. It is celebrated during March in the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia, corresponding with ...
Honoree by the
National Women's History Project The National Women's History Alliance (NWHA) is an American non-profit organization dedicated to honoring and preserving women's history. The NWHA was formerly known as the National Women's History Project. Based out of Santa Rosa, California sinc ...
.


Non-profit and NGO connections

One of Damon's goals was to eliminate sexism. From 1980 to 2000 Damon founded and directed No Limits for Women Artists, an international organization that sought to improve female leadership and help men in becoming independent allies. In her "What is Creativity" manifesto, Damon asserts that "creativity is the birthright of all people". No Limits for Women Artists worked to foster strong connections among its members, requiring members to participate in daily phone calls with each other. These calls gave women the opportunity to talk about their art, goals, motivation, and productivity. In 1991 Damon founded Keepers of the Waters, a nonprofit organization that serves as an international community to encourage "art, science and community projects for the understanding and remediation of living water systems." The nonprofit is run with a collaborative approach and was started with the support of the Hubert Humphrey Institute. In 2006, Damon, alongside a group of artists, scientists, and funders, met in Vancouver and created a summary report for
UNESCO The United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization is a specialized agency of the United Nations (UN) aimed at promoting world peace and security through international cooperation in education, arts, sciences and culture. It ...
titled "Art in Ecology – A Think Tank on Arts and Sustainability." UNESCO had commissioned a report in advance of this meeting titled "Mapping the Terrain of Contemporary EcoART Practice", of which the meeting and summary report were a result.


Performance art/installation art

In the 1970s, Damon began to work as a performance artist. Her work explored the connection between women and nature, often through covering herself with natural materials such as feathers and bark.


Performances


''7000 Year Old Woman'', 1977

In 1977, she created a piece called ''7000 Year Old Woman'' and performed it in New York City twice. Her first performance took place on March 21, 1977, at the Cayman Gallery. Her second performance took place on May 21, 1977, on Prince Street near West Broadway. Damon commented that the figure that ''7000 Year Old Woman'' embodies "is my sister, mother, my grandmothers, my great grandmothers, friends and lovers. She is my woman line of 7,000 years. She is me, the me that I know very little about.” The Cayman Gallery performance took place in the presence of other women. Damon painted her body, hair and face in white and hung 420 small bags filled with colored flour on her body. A woman drew a spiral path for her to follow. Damon walked the spiral, cutting the bags on her body with a pair of scissors. The performance concluded with her surrounded by the empty bags; audience members were allowed to take them. Damon offered them in hopes that others would perform their own rites. Damon states in a recount of the performance, published in
Heresies Heresy is any belief or theory that is strongly at variance with established beliefs or customs, in particular the accepted beliefs of a church or religious organization. The term is usually used in reference to violations of important religi ...
Vol. 3, (a Lesbian Art and Artists publication), that the work commented on time. She writes "I came out of the piece with a knowledge about the burden of time. A woman sixty years old is maybe twenty times more burdened than the thirty year old by her story. If we had had7000 years of celebrated female energy this would be different." Damon performed the piece for the general public on Prince Street, with the assistance of artist
Su Friedrich Su Friedrich (born December 12, 1954) is an American avant-garde film director, producer, writer, and cinematographer. Early life Su Friedrich was born in 1954 in New Haven, Connecticut. Her mother was German and came to the US with Friedric ...
. Friedrich adorned Damon's body with 400 bags of colored flour and confined herself to within a sand circle. The audience was unpredictable. Friends brought flowers while boys threw eggs at her. Damon walked the circle cutting the bags from her body and handing them to the audience. As more bags were given away her sense of vulnerability rose. In the ''Heresies Vol. 3,'' she states she finishes the piece by returning to the center of the circle. Damon comments that after that performance "I never knew until that afternoon how completely all things female had been eradicated from our streets. So totally is this true we do not even notice that she is missing."


''Blind Beggar Woman and the Virgin Mary,'' 1979

In a 1979 piece called ''Blind Beggarwoman and the Virgin Mary'', Damon, as the central performer, dressed in rags and bags of dust, with gauze taped over her eyes. Crouching over a begging bowl filled with more pouches, she asked the spectators to whisper stories from their lives to her. The goal of the piece was to create a space where women's stories could be told. Damon discussed the piece in an interview: "In that performance, I asked the question: who are the female Homers, the female storytellers, who were the containers of history and memory? On the street, I begged for stories from people’s lives, while my eyes were covered with these very obvious patches. I practiced with a friend of mine who was blind. People started saying that I was the multi-breasted female goddess and stuff like that, but that was not the origin of this piece.
May Stevens May Stevens (June 9, 1924 – December 9, 2019) was an American feminist artist, political activist, educator, and writer. Early life and education May Stevens was born in Boston to working-class parents, Alice Dick Stevens and Ralph Stanley ...
got it right—she was the first to recognize that the work was also a mutilation image." The other performers either crouched low or sat on the floor, repeating "gestures ..suggestive of women's endurance and of the cyclic nature of women's work."


''Rape Memory'', 1980

Damon performed ''Rape Memory A''s part of the 1980
Great American Lesbian Art Show The Great American Lesbian Art Show (GALAS) was an art exhibition at the Woman's Building (a feminist art center) in Los Angeles, California with associated events in other locations. It ran from 3–31 May 1980. The Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Comm ...
in Los Angeles. Against a chorus of voices trying to silence her, she attempted to share her own traumatic rape experience. After an hour, she was allowed to describe an assault she experienced when she was two and a half years old. Audience members were allowed to shared their own experiences after her performance. Damon sought to heal through community and encouraged women to speak out.


Installations


''Shrine for Everywoman'', 1980

As part of the International Festival of Women Artists in 1980 in
Copenhagen Copenhagen ( or .; da, København ) is the capital and most populous city of Denmark, with a proper population of around 815.000 in the last quarter of 2022; and some 1.370,000 in the urban area; and the wider Copenhagen metropolitan ar ...
, Damon created an interactive installation piece. Damon invited women to write thoughts and stories down and took these thoughts and put them in small bags, hanging them in rows on cords like prayer flags. Women's thoughts formed a gathering space. A
mandala A mandala ( sa, मण्डल, maṇḍala, circle, ) is a geometric configuration of symbols. In various spiritual traditions, mandalas may be employed for focusing attention of practitioners and adepts, as a spiritual guidance tool, for e ...
, a
Buddhist Buddhism ( , ), also known as Buddha Dharma and Dharmavinaya (), is an Indian religion or philosophical tradition based on teachings attributed to the Buddha. It originated in northern India as a -movement in the 5th century BCE, and ...
symbol of the universe marked the space as a place of community. The contents of the bags contained stories, hopes, fears, and visions. Damon created a space of recovery and spirituality.


''A Memory of Clean Water,'' 1985

In 1985, Damon collaborated with artist Robyn Stein to lead a team of papermakers in the casting of a 250-foot section of dry riverbed in Castle Creek, Utah. Papermakers included Helmut Becker, Coco Gordon, Ray Tomasso, and Lucy Wallingford. ''A Memory of Clean Water'' was commissioned by the Danforth Museum of Art and received funding from the Massachusetts Council on the Arts and Humanities. A 1987 film by Hopi filmmaker Victor Masayesva documents the casting of the piece. This piece marked the beginning of Damon's transition into water activism.


Works in China

The Living Water Garden, 1998 Damon's collaborative public performance works in China put her into contact with city government, with whom she collaborated to build a 6-acre park along the Funan River in Chengdu's Jin Jiang District. Other collaborators included American landscape architect
Margie Ruddick Margie Ruddick is a New York-based landscape architect. In 2013 she won the National Design Award for landscape architecture. Her projects include designs at Queens Plaza Dutch Kills Green, Urban Garden Room, New York Aquarium The New York ...
, The Living Water Garden was the first urban eco-environmental park in the world to take water as its theme. The park integrates water ecology, water treatment, and education. It includes a constructed wetlands that function as a biological water treatment system, a simulated natural forest community, and an environmental education center. After a variety of treatment processes, the river water, which was polluted by the upstream sources and urban domestic sewage, flows back into the Fu River. Every day, the storage of Living Water Garden can reach 300 cubic meters, demonstrating natural processes of turning polluted water from "Turbid" to "Clear" and from "Dead" to "Alive". Due to the combination of ecological, aesthetic, cultural and educational functions, Living Water Garden has won the "Excellent Waterfront Award" of the International Waterfront Centre in 1998, the "Environmental Design Award" jointly evaluated by the International Association for environmental design and regional magazine of the United States (juxtaposed with the Thames River Treatment Project in the United Kingdom), as well as several international awards including the 1998 UN Habitat Awards. At present, it has become one of the most visited parks in Chengdu.


Publications


''Water Talks,'' 2022

Damon's memoire ''Water Talks'' was published by SteinerBooks in 2022. Anthropologist Dr. Jane Goodall wrote the foreword. ''Water Talks'' recounts Damon's early performance career, her transition into water activism, her collaborative public performance work in
Chengdu Chengdu (, ; Simplified Chinese characters, simplified Chinese: 成都; pinyin: ''Chéngdū''; Sichuanese dialects, Sichuanese pronunciation: , Standard Chinese pronunciation: ), Chinese postal romanization, alternatively Romanization of Chi ...
and
Lhasa Lhasa (; Lhasa dialect: ; bo, text=ལྷ་ས, translation=Place of Gods) is the urban center of the prefecture-level city, prefecture-level Lhasa (prefecture-level city), Lhasa City and the administrative capital of Tibet Autonomous Regio ...
, the Living Water Garden in Chengdu, as well as subsequent public art projects in the United States.


Exhibitions and major works


Performances

* 1985-90: ''The Shrine for Everywoman''. * 1983-1989: ''A Mediation with Stones for the Survival of the Planet.'' * 1981-83: ''A Rape Memory.'' * 1979-81: ''Blind Beggar Woman.'' * 1977: ''7,000 Year Old Woman'', New York, N.Y.


Shows

* 2019: ''Keepers of the Waters: Lhasa & Chengdu,'' Taipei Biennial. * 2012: ''Feminist, and...,'' Mattress Factory, Pittsburgh, PA. * 1986-1991: ''A Memory of Clean Water,'' Everhart Museum. * 1990: ''An Homage to Rivers,'' Aspen Art Museum Biennial. * January 25 – March 22, 1987: ''Special Projects (Winter 1987)'', MoMA PS1. * January 17 – March 14, 1982: ''The Wild Art Show'', MoMA PS1.


Further reading


Articles

* Damon, Betsy. "The 7,000 Year Old Woman," ''Heresies'' 1, no.3 (Fall 1977) * Forney, Matt. "Environmentalism By Ordinary People is Perilous in China--U.S. Woman Makes Enemies But Perseveres to Help Clean Up Stinking River," ''The Wall Street Journal'' (Jul. 2000) * Carruthers, Beth. "Art, Sweet Art: Adaptive, Hybrid and Flexibe, EcoART Moves Hearts, Changes Minds and Ultimately Alters Behaviors," ''Alternatives Journal'' 32, no. 4-5 (Dec. 2006) * Jones, Diana. "Development Project Uses Art to Control Water Flow in Larimer," ''Pittsburgh Post-Gazette'' (Jan. 2015)


Books

* Moyer, Twylene and Glenn Harper d.s
The New Earthwork: Art Action Agency
', Seattle, Washington: University of Washington Press (2012).


Web sources


Keepers of the Waters
2017.
An Interview with Betsy Damon: Living Water
2009.


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Damon, Betsy 1940 births Living people 20th-century American women artists 21st-century American women artists Columbia University alumni People associated with the Metropolitan Museum of Art Skidmore College alumni