Women in Art: Part 2 — film roles

In our continuing series about Women in Art, we’re focusing on the roles women have taken in the art of film. Since time began, women’s roles in movies were almost always secondary — a love interest, the damsel in distress waiting to be rescued or slightly more interesting, the alluring femme fatale. Much like how women have been viewed in most of mankind’s history and culture of male dominance, women more often than not took the backseat even if they sometimes get to sit up front as a convenient passenger. Even today despite the advances in social justice, great roles for women are rare. But it is getting better; there are more women in movies, increased promotion of female stars and higher salaries. There’s even films produced, written and directed by women. That said, if Hollywood only supports already-approved versions of half-naked and gorgeous-faced females, then it’s not worth getting too excited about. More progress needs to be made and that can only come from a greater appreciation in the diversity of roles, stories and impressions we have of women.

Here, we’ll showcase a sample of films not just starring women but about women — roles that tell their stories, ones worth getting excited about and to be inspired by.

37 Seconds (Directed by Hikari)

I really enjoyed what Hikari (a female writer and director) does here with 37 Seconds — it’s got that feeling of a true story even if it isn’t one. But what is true, is that it stars a new actress who actually has cerebral palsy. Born disabled Yuma (Mei Kayama) is an unknown 23 year-old manga artist who’s trying to make sense of her life, her relationships and her sense of independence. A very fresh take on a coming of age story, Mei’s performance, because her physicality is real, gives the film weight. Her innocent wanderings against her mother’s watchful eye, feel both liberating and yet dangerous. The outside world is both exciting and cruel, especially so for someone in her condition. And the more Yuma explores the universe, the more joy and pain she suffers, but she can’t help but want more of it. She finds truth, both beautiful and ugly. I wish not to give any thing away here, but the film concludes in a fashion that surprises. It’s beyond mere sentiment — one is caught experiencing real courage and generosity that moves the heart in a deep and meaningful way. 37 Seconds is an inspiring film for anyone, but especially so for young woman.

Lost in Translation (Directed by Sofia Coppola)

Sofia Coppola’s gem Lost in Translation is a celebration of youthful wander and wonder. The story begins with a young newly married American Charlotte (Scarlett Johansson) who moves to Tokyo with her photographer husband. There she finds herself completely alone, her partner far too busy to spend any time with here as his celebrity-driven career consumes him as it does many in his field. At the hotel-residence she’s staying she finds unexpected friendship in Bob (Bill Murray), an older American actor who’s in Japan shooting an ad for a whiskey company — this is common for past-their-prime Hollywood actors whose celebrity status enables them to secure an income and lifestyle they’ve been accustomed to. Charlotte’s character is both young and innocent, yet sad and lost. We can feel her moments of joy as our own, as well as her melancholy and loneliness. Complemented by Bill Murray’s restrained humour and grace, the two stars make wonderful visual music. Lost in Translation never fails to make me laugh or smile. There’s an exquisitely-controlled sense of the romantic; it’s fun, tender and strangely sincere despite operating in the surreal, neon-coloured atmosphere of Japanese nightlife.

Million Dollar Baby (Directed by Clint Eastwood)

What a film Million Dollar Baby is. A small story about a small town girl too poor, too lost, and too old to become anything in a world as cruel and lonely as the one she inhabits. She, of course, is Maggie Fitzgerald (Hilary Swank) a single 30 plus year old woman with literally nothing except a dream, to become a boxer. She searches out and finds herself in the boxing gym of Frankie Dunn (Clint Eastwood), a veteran Los Angeles boxing trainer who doesn’t really have much more than she does other than the reputation for being a great trainer. After much pleading Maggie coerces the reluctant Dunn to train her, and with the encouragement and help of Eddie Dupris (Morgan Freeman), a former contender who also hasn’t much except his friendship with Dunn, she becomes a world class contender. But the journey to stardom, as compelling as it is, isn’t nearly as powerful as what the journey does to these three characters. As a film, the direction is tight and genuinely emotional and both Eastwood and Freeman do amazing work in supporting roles but the real star is Hilary Swank who wins her second Oscar. Her portrayal is so sincere, so heartfelt, that it makes the ending almost unbearable. But years later, watching the Million Dollar Baby again, one realizes the real message of the film and it’s hidden optimism; Maggie’s story is actually a triumphant one. She was dealt a bad hand at the start and a bad hand at the end, but what she did in the middle — in that short time in a boxing gym — she lived her dream and became happier than she ever thought she could be. It’s a reminder that it’s not the hand you’re dealt that matters but how you play it and in so doing, transform your own life and the lives of those around you.

The Puzzle (Directed by Marc Turtletaub)

Kelly Macdonald is one of the most underrated, underused gems in the acting world. She’s always been a scene stealer — as the wild-underaged Diane in Danny Boyle’s electric indie film Trainspotting, the innocent hand maiden Mary in Robert Altman’s mystery drama Gosford Park, and the adorable Karla Jean in the Coen brothers’ masterpiece No Country for Old Men. In Marc Turtletaub’s Puzzle she finally gets a starring role and paired with the late Irrfan Khan, Macdonald shines big. She plays Agnes, a 40 year-old married mother of two whose life has become so routine, so boring and meaningless that she knows exactly what’s about to happen every minute of the day (she even predicts with perfect accuracy the seconds it takes for her husband to wake up to the alarm). Her life is one entirely devoted to caring for others. The opening birthday scene with it’s muted lighting and carefully subdued staging says it all — Agnes has no life. But during that same birthday party (which was her own) she receives on one hand, an iphone and on the other, which interests her more, a 1000 piece jig saw puzzle. As it turns out she’s a natural at this puzzle-solving business. Completely hooked, she decides one day to head to the big city to find the store where such “difficult” puzzles are sold. There she finds and responds to an ad for a “puzzle partner” for entering into contests. After meeting Robert (Khan) who’s the current national champion, she gradually awakes from her stupor and the two develop an understated care and love for each other as they continue to practice. But as the experience ignites the life inside her it also places her in direct conflict with her family. The message in the film is quiet but powerful: Puzzles may seem like only games for children but here it serves as a metaphor of our need to find order out of chaos, and sometimes the chains of tradition that many of us, and especially women, continue to be conditioned to accept is the very chaos we must free themselves from. Because at the end, the only order that matters is inner order.

Poetry (Directed by Lee Chang Dong)

I love the work of Lee Chang Dong. And in his poignant and subtly beautiful film Poetry, he takes us into old age. In Asia, many older women find themselves single, either as a widow or the old grandmother, who lingers on in society often as a caretaker to grandchildren whose parents are absent. In Poetry, 66 year-old Mija (Yoon Jeong‑hee) is stuck with raising her lazy grandson who may have taken part of an assault and murder of a young girl at his local high school. On top of the burden awareness of such a situation brings, Mija also begins to suffer Alzheimer’s disease. She was once a beautiful and chic women, and still dresses with elegance and good taste despite her poor financial outlook, and this brings added distress from judgemental neighbours in the small town of Busan. So here we have a single elderly women, diagnosed with a dreadful illness, financially struggling, and trying to save her grandson from going to jail. But Mija carries herself onward despite all that is happening and along her journey she ends up signing on for a poetry class. There she’s finds something inexplicable — herself. Despite being in such a depleted stage in her life she experiences beauty through art, through seeing. Poetry is surprisingly deep for such a small-scale movie with limited location set. But it’s a beautiful meditation on the living and dying that happens in an elderly woman’s life, a story that’s often left untold.

Women in Art, Part 1

“What would men be without women? Scarce, sir…mighty scarce.” — Mark Twain

Long overdue, this begins a series of posts dedicated exclusively to the often underrated and unsung women in the visual arts.

First off, women amaze me. Not only do they carry the burden of procreation, they’re most often the soul of the family unit and caretaker of children during their most vulnerable and formative years. Women can truly be said to be the foundation of society, one built on love. With all due to respect to my father, I know that I’d never become the person I am now without my mother. She tirelessly raised five children, worked full-time alongside my father building the family business (which was six to seven days of the week, usually seven), did almost all the cooking and cleaning and still managed to teach me what it meant to be human. She never spent a day not caring for or worrying about all us kids while helping others outside of the family in goodwill and charity. Almost my entire sense of what it means to be honourable, compassionate and generous comes directly from her. And she did all this with less than a grade three education and having to move the family from country to country across three different continents; I can’t imagine what she’d have accomplished with the privileges that I have received.

In the arts, and almost all fields in human history, women have been discarded, rejected and prevented from individual expression and creativity. Education and opportunity were severely restricted. It wasn’t even until as late as 1984 that the last state in America (Mississippi) would ratify the 19th Amendment allowing women to vote (which was officially passed in 1920). That’s the kind of suffrage women have had to endure, not to mention the psychological and often physical violence that accompanied a patriarchal society. That, of course, meant that we never saw much art, literature, musical, or acting accolades amongst the female sex. Still, there were women in history that refused to be imprisoned by such exclusion. The likes of literary giants like Mary Shelley, Jane Austin and Virginia Wolfe were proof of that as were great scientists like Marie Curie, Jane Goodall and (one of my heroes) Rachel Carson. Influential philosophers like Simone Weil, Ayn Rand and Hannah Arendt also bucked the trend. They were derided for doing so, but they did it regardless. That’s courage. In the art world, women’s roles in theatre were, for centuries, played by men while female designers and painters were rejected almost without exception, their talents squandered in limited supporting roles. But again, some would find a way.

In honour of the recent celebration of International Woman’s Day (which unfortunately has been superseded by our current crisis), here are some women in the visual arts who have shined despite everything, both in the past and now, even with the playing field still far from being level or fair.

Joan Mitchell, Painter

Joan Mitchell’s monumental art.

I love the art of Joan Mitchell. Her super-large scale paintings are filled with the brilliance of light and mastery of colour. As part of the second wave of abstract expressionists, she was one of greats of the modern art movement of the 1950’s and 60’s at a time when the big men of abstract art (Pollack, De Kooning, Mark Rothko, etc) dominated the fine art headlines, leaving most, if not all, women artists completely ignored. Her commitment to gestural abstraction was matched only by her same commitment to help young artists, as she generously took in young painters into her home and even after her death, left a designation in her will to continue to support individual artists with the Joan Mitchell Foundation.

Faye Dunaway, Actor

Faye Dunaway in Bonnie and Clyde.

A powerful presence on screen, Faye Dunaway could do more with a look or a glance than most actors today could do with a line. The blond-haired actress develops empathy and deep penetration even when she plays to her icy good looks and strong persona. She can be powerful or vulnerable, often times both as she was in the Roman Polanski’s classic Chinatown. She can be fun and wild as she was in her sexually vibrant role in Arthur Penn’s Bonnie & Clyde. In Sidney Lumet’s masterpiece drama Network, she’s brilliantly cunning yet elegant as news producer Diana Christensen With Dunaway, you can’t wait to find out what she’s up to next. Actors who go all in and expose themselves so fully on screen are rare; those like Faye Dunaway make the movies they star in practically pivot around them.

Mary Blair, Concept Artist

A video tribute to the work of Mary Blair.

One of the most magnificent concept artists of our time, Mary Blair is responsible for the look of many of the brilliant designs and stylings of Walt Disney’s films and theme park creations. From Alice in Wonderland, Peter Pan, Cinderella and Song of the South to the magical rides It’s a Small World and Tomorrowland, Blair’s work illuminates the senses. She was a mastermind of creative ideas and brought modern art into a craft locked into circular shapes and rubber hose characters. Brilliant with shape, colour and composition, her artistry defined excellence in illustration and art direction. There isn’t a concept artist today who’s not influenced by her work.

Sofia Coppola, Screenwriter/Director

Sofia Coppola behind the camera.

Sofia Coppola’s artistry is bold and fresh. The screenwriter/director has a great eye for moments. Like her famous father Francis Ford Coppola, her films have a distinct feel to them and they are uniquely her own. I loved Lost in Translation. Starring the irreplaceable Bill Murray and a young, yet to become famous, Scarlett Johansson, the movie explores beautifully the flowering of friendship, melancholy and nuanced romance. It’s a film the feels lost in time. In her most recent film The Beguiled Coppola showcases how far she’s advanced as a filmmaker, in particular her fine eye in direction and editing. Based on the novel A Painted Devil by Thomas P. Cullinan, Coppola turned the film on its dangerous edges, making the male-female dynamic of the story the center of attention and shockingly into a dynamite thriller. The film is lush, yet sharp, delighting the eyes while tearing at the tension bit by bit. It also made her only the second female director ever to win the Best Director prize at Cannes in 2017.

Jillian Tamaki, Illustrator/Graphic Novelist

Illustration by Jillian Tamaki

Jillian Tamaki is a magnificent young illustrator working today in a field currently dominated by photography and digital wizardry. Yet her work continues to shine and shine far above them. Her artistry is whimsical, graceful and elegant. As creator/illustrator of Super Mutant Magic Academy, Skim and They Say Blue and illustrator of numerous magazines and books, she’s won the Eisner, the Caldecott Honour, Society of Illustrator’s Gold Medal and has received the Governor General’s Award — Canada’s highest honour for a civilian — twice. And her touching graphic novel This One Summer, co-written with her cousin Mariko Tamaki, is one of those special creations; a book of tenderness and truth, beautifully illustrated. It’s masterpiece that skips along and touches the heart at its edges and then penetrates with time. Looking at her drawings always charms and lifts one’s spirit.

This concludes the first in our series of Women in Art. More will be coming. In the meantime, please check out all the work of these great artists for you’ll be well rewarded.