Indira Freitas Johnson

Indira Freitas Johnson (born 1943) is an artist and nonviolence educator.

Indira Freitas Johnson
Born
Indira Freitas Johnson

1943
Mumbai, India

Johnson was born and raised in Mumbai, India and received a Bachelor of Arts in English Literature from the University of Mumbai in 1964, and a four-year diploma in Applied Arts from Sir J.J. Institute of Applied Art in 1964.[1] In 1965, Johnson was awarded a grant to study at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago where she received a Master of Fine Arts in 1967.[1] Johnson was invited to teach graduate level classes at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in Ceramic Sculpture in 1998 and at the Rhode Island School of Design in Public Art in 2001.

Johnson is the recipient of numerous grants and awards, including the Governor's Award for the Arts, Kohler Company Arts and Industry Grant, Arts ConText, Rhode Island School of Design Museum and the Pew Charitable Trust, Arts International Travelling Fellowship, Raven Foundation, and the Illinois Arts Council.[2][3]

Johnson's work is represented in numerous major public and private collections including: Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art, Asian American Arts Centre in New York, Rhode Island School of Design Museum in Providence, Mobile Museum of Art in Mobile Alabama, State of Illinois Building in Chicago, Ankor Consultants in Brussels, High Museum of Art in Atlanta, Arkansas Arts Center and Decorative Arts Museum in Little Rock, Arkansas, University of Illinois Law School in Carbondale, Illinois, SHARE in Mumbai India, High Museum of Art in Atlanta GA, Air India Corporation in Mumbai, India, Kohler Company in Sheboygan Wisconsin, and Garden/Varelli in Mumbai India.[1]

Public art projects

As an artist, Johnson's identity has evolved as part sculptor, cultural worker, peace activist and educator.[4] Her numerous studio art work and community engaged projects explore an array of social issues including the cultural dimension of domestic violence, leprosy health education, labor, the environment, gender, peace, nonviolence and literacy.[4] They follow the "call and response" tradition that is prevalent in many cultures. She puts out a call and the community responds so that the final artwork is a hybrid that depends on and is completed by community interaction.

Her public art projects include:

  • Resonance of Emptiness, 2013, investigates the concept of emptiness and related ideas of impermanence and interconnectedness.[5] Johnson was one of 9 international artists and 21 Korean artists invited to participate in the Haein Art Biennale in South Korea[6]
  • Ten Thousand Ripples, 2011–2013, is a multi-platform public arts project, a collaboration with cultural and community organizations from the city of Chicago. As part of the project, one hundred emerging Buddha heads were installed throughout the city in sites chosen by host community organizations located in Chicago's 50 wards.[7] The goal of Ten Thousand Ripples was to provide the general community with an intense and meaningful public art experience outside of traditional art venues and in doing so act as a catalyst for community conversations and interactions about peace and nonviolence. Sites included parks, public plazas, alleys, libraries, building lobbies, and abandoned lots Changing Worlds was the lead arts organization in a consortium of over 30 social service, educational, religious and arts organizations.[8]
  • Growing Peace, 2011, consisted of Johnson creating a five-acre field sculpture. It revolves around themes of the power of human perspective and its relationship to the process of finding peace within civilization. Johnson uses the universal symbol of a foot, which she says grounds us to the earth and gives us stability[9]
  • 25th Bowl, 2010, was an exhibition at the Illinois State Museum, Chicago Gallery, which explored themes of interconnectedness, and water sustainability issues.
  • Community Blessings are Rangolis, a South Asian folk art tradition where a woman welcomes the day by painting patterns on the threshold of her home to ensure the well-being of her family. Rangolis use traditional materials like rice flour, turmeric, earth, and flower petals and nontraditional materials like found objects and recycled materials. The first ‘Community Blessings" was in downtown Evanston right after the tragedy of 9/11 where the community came together to express their sorrow and their hope. Johnson has facilitated Community Blessings in diverse communities ranging from Providence, RI 2001, The Chicago Field Museum, 2004, Illinois Wesleyan University, 2004, Contemporary Art Center, Peoria, IL, 2006, SHARE, Mumbai, India, 2006 Parkland College, Champaign, IL, 2009.
  • Hand in Hand, 2009, was displayed at the College of St. Catherine in St. Paul Minnesota. It questions the nature of "free" labor and investigates the basic transference of energy which is present in every form of exchange whether, physical, emotional, economic or psychic.
  • Conversations: Here and Now, 2008, was commissioned by the City of Evanston, IL. Public meetings were held throughout the city to involve the community in planning the sculpture. Today, Conversations: Here and Now, has become a city landmark, a space for conversation.
  • Where Sky Meets Water, 2007, sponsored by Chicago Cultural Center's Public Art Program engaged passersby, random people who helped float over 800 leaves in the Chicago River, in a ritual offering for peace.
  • Enough; Indira Freitas Johnson and Voices from around the World, 2003, was sponsored by the Chicago Museum of Contemporary Art, and involved women from the Golibar slum of Mumbai and a wide range of people from the Chicago area and around the world in the question of how much is enough and what do we all really want.
  • FREENOTFREE, 2001, sponsored by the RISD Museum and the Pew Charitable Trust where Johnson worked intensely with a literacy group from the Rhode Island Public Library as well as collected stories from the wider Providence Community.
  • Voices of Shakti; Pain, Struggle, Courage, a collaboration with women from Apna Ghar, a Chicago-based South Asian domestic violence shelter, which used words, objects and floor drawings to demonstrate the South Asian cultural dimension of domestic violence. This show traveled from Artemisia Gallery, Chicago, 1994, to Beacon Street Gallery, 1995, Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, IL 1996, College of St. Catherine, St. Paul, MN 1998.
  • Our Own Vision, 1990, was Indira Johnson's first public art project, a collaboration with a Local Bombay NGO and the Indian Western Railway around leprosy health education. Working with a group of tribal children who had been affected by leprosy, Indira and partners painted a commuter train that ran between Mumbai and the far suburbs and spread the message of leprosy's curability to thousands of people.

Selected solo exhibitions

  • Energy Reboot: The Art of Indira Freitas Johnson, Krasl Art Center, St. Joseph, MI, 2012
  • Opposition and Unity, Parkland College Gallery, Champaign, IL, 2009
  • Satyagraha; Holding Fast to Truth, Chicago Public Library, Chicago, IL, 2007
  • Lifetime Offer, Dimensions Variable, Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago IL, 2007
  • Indira Freitas Johnson, New Work, Walsh Gallery, Chicago, IL 2006
  • Indira Freitas Johnson; A Merging of Two Cultures, Contemporary Arts Center, Peoria, IL, 2004
  • Transforming Materials; Uniting the Physical and the Spiritual. Illinois Wesleyan University, Bloomington, IL 2003
  • Process of Karma, Indianapolis Art Center Indianapolis IN, 2000
  • Vehicles of Transformation, Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago, IL, 1993
  • Storm Shelters and Other Works, Evanston Art Center, Evanston, IL, 1991
  • Double Vision, Prince of Wales Museum, Bombay, India, 1990

Selected group exhibitions

  • Vice / Virtue, Northern Illinois University, DeKalb IL, 2013
  • Streamlines, Ephemeral Presence in Contemporary Art, Mahaprajapati Vihar, Vaishali, India, 2013
  • Infinite Mirror, Images of American Identity, International Art and Artists National touring exhibition, 2011–2014
  • Pathways and Portals; Art, Nature and Science, Illinois State Museum, 2010–11
  • 798 Art Zone, Kohler Company's Arts/Industry collection, Beijing, China, 2009
  • Erasing Borders, Indo American Arts Center, New York, 2007
  • Life InSight; The Human Experience, Kentucky Museum of Art & Craft, Louisville, KY, 2006
  • Poetic Expression of Mortality: Figurative Ceramics from the Porter Price Collection, Mobile Museum of Art, Mobile AL 2005
  • Fatal Love, Queens Museum, Queens, New York, 2005
  • Particles and Passion: The Art of Clay, Academy Art Museum, Easton, MD, 2004
  • Honoring Tradition, Perceptions of Three Asian American Artists, Ball State Museum, Muncie, IN, 2004
  • Masala, Diversity and Democracy in South Asian Art, William Benton Museum of Art, University of Connecticut, 2004

Residencies

  • Anderson Ranch, Snowmass, CO. (1998 & 1999), St Catherine's University, 1991 and 2009[10]
  • Adrian College, Adrian, MI 2001
  • Kohler Company, Sheboygan, WI, Lakeside Studio, Lakeside, MI, 1989
  • A long term residency at SHARE in one of the slums of Mumbai, India.[11] It is a spiritual experience to go back every year and work in Golibar, where her family has worked for over 30 years. SHARE is part of Marketplace Handwork of India an organization that provides employment opportunities and leadership training for women and persons with disabilities in India (www.share.com)

Additional work

In 1993, in response to ethnic violence in the world, Johnson founded Shanti Foundation for Peace, whose mission is to use the processes of art to help people understand that their individual action can make a difference in the world. Since then Johnson has been teaching art and nonviolence decision-making skills to children in Chicago and Evanston area public schools.[12]

In addition, Johnson has shared creativity and knowledge with numerous groups including Chicago Historical Society, Loyola University, Chicago, Christian Brothers University, Memphis, TN. She was a Round Table Presenter at the 4th International Congress of Educating Cities, The Arts and Humanities As Agents of Social Change, Keynote speaker for Drawing Art Together, Sponsored by Getty Center for Education, a panelist at Daughters of Revolution: Gender, Ethnicity, Art, Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, OH 1992, Multi-Ethnic Voices and Main Stream [sic] Aesthetics Chicago International New Art Forms Expo. Chicago, 1990.

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References

  1. Weigel, Jenniffer (9 November 2013). "Indira Freitas Johnson, Evanston Artist: Artist-sculptor wants her works to promote peace, and inspire social change". Chicago Tribune.
  2. Ross, Suzanne (12 September 2013). "REVISITING THE BUDDHA: CHECKING IN WITH INDIRA JOHNSON". The Raven Foundation.
  3. Smith, Cindy. "Indira Freitas Johnson Hand in Hand; Opposition and Unity". Parkland Art Gallery. Retrieved 20 February 2014.
  4. "Indira Freitas Johnson". University of Michigan, School of Art and Design. 12 November 2013.
  5. "Haein Art Project". Art Oxygen. Retrieved 20 February 2014.
  6. Yo-rim, Cha. "Temple project promises journey of self-exploration". Korea Herald. Retrieved 20 February 2014.
  7. Brachear, Manya (5 June 2013). "100 Buddhas rise from vacant lots".
  8. McKean, Lise. "Indira Johnson". Lise McKean. Retrieved 20 February 2014.
  9. ""Growing Peace" - Indira Johnson's fields art project in Oregon, IL". Asian American Arts Centre. 13 July 2011.
  10. Michener, Julie (17 February 2009). "Dale and Mary Mrnak Memorial Visiting Artist shares art's role in social justice and peace-making with community". St. Kate's News.
  11. "I Can't, Yes I Can: Discovering Strength, Shifting Perceptions". Marketplace: Handwork of India. 19 June 2013.
  12. "Shanti Foundation for Peace". Chicago Community Trust. Archived from the original on 26 February 2014. Retrieved 20 February 2014.
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