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When her career is derailed by a rare disease, artist Paula Billups takes up knitting to pass the time. While unraveling her work, Paula thinks of Penelope in Homer's "Odyssey", the queen whose cleverness holds a hundred unwelcome suitors at bay, promising to marry when her weaving is finished, but undoing her work each night. She confounds the suitors for several years. Mystified by the success of such a fragile pretext, Paula builds an ancient-style loom and begins to weave and unweave. By re-creating Penelope's ruse, Paula seeks understand Penelope's power and hopes to re-weave her own…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
When her career is derailed by a rare disease, artist Paula Billups takes up knitting to pass the time. While unraveling her work, Paula thinks of Penelope in Homer's "Odyssey", the queen whose cleverness holds a hundred unwelcome suitors at bay, promising to marry when her weaving is finished, but undoing her work each night. She confounds the suitors for several years. Mystified by the success of such a fragile pretext, Paula builds an ancient-style loom and begins to weave and unweave. By re-creating Penelope's ruse, Paula seeks understand Penelope's power and hopes to re-weave her own creative practice, in spite of the illness that saps her energy. Reflecting on the unravelings and re-weavings of her art career, and using the insight gained from her hours at the loom, Paula discovers the invisible weapons and hidden strategies Penelope creates and uses in her secret war. To pursue a deep examination of Homer's Odyssey and Penelope's place in it, Paula enlists the help of her father, Dr. Edward V. George, a retired Classical scholar. Braiding together reports from the studio, research notes on the ancient text, letters, and journal entries, Penelope Unweaving documents an artist's search for the power to re-weave a new creative life from the remnants of the old one.
Autorenporträt
Paula Billups A native of Texas and a New England transplant, Ms. Billups holds an MFA from the Transart Institute in Berlin, a BFA from the Lyme Academy of Fine Arts, and a BA from the University of Texas at Austin. Her work spans the media of painting, drawing, writing, collage, installation, research, and autotheory. Her art and writing have appeared in exhibitions and periodicals in the U.S. and abroad. She has exhibited in the United States, Cuba, the Czech Republic, Germany, Luxembourg, and the United Kingdom, and has participated in collaborations and projects in Canada, Georgia, and Tunisia. In 2011, she was the inaugural artist-in-residence at the Siena Art Institute in Italy. In 2015, she created Dragon Food Press to publish her art books and written projects. To learn more, visit www.paulabillups.com and www.dragonfoodpress.com. Dr. Edward V. George Edward V. George (PhD, Classics, Wisconsin, 1966), a native of Buffalo, New York, is Professor Emeritus of classical studies and humanities at Texas Tech University, where he taught from 1971-2010. He studied Homeric Archaeology at Wisconsin under Bronze Age scholar Emmett Bennett, and published articles on the epic poet Apollonios Rhodios. He completed bilingual editions (with English translation) of two speeches by the Greek orator Isocrates and several Latin works by the Spanish humanist Juan Luis Vives (1493-1540).