Laure Drogoul, The Root (Blue-Eyed)

Laure’s big head was taken directly from Evergreen’s collection of Japanese decorative arts–the Japanese lacquer, netsuke, and inro collections. She studied the collection and designed her own gigantic netsuke–a mask netsuke from Japanese theater. She wanted it to look like it fell out of the tree. The inside of the head is like an apothecary’s inro–a very small compartmentalized purse worn on the belt of a kimono–which she’s filled with herbs, medicines, and plantings.

Laure is an artist who sees a connection in just about everything she does. The head is a devil, which is, of course, a symbol of evil. But she’s also pasted all kinds of maps–from Baltimore to the Middle East–to the head, and hovering above the map surfaces are images of snakes, garden flowers, and large, menacing flies. She wants people to make visual connections. She wants to make references–to war, to the ‘blue-eyed devil’–and to make people think.

Excerpted from Johns Hopkins Magazine, September 2004

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