On display through February 16th at the Art Gallery at the Fulginiti Pavilion.
The pill is a quintessential icon of American culture. It encapsulates our history, shapes our lives – both private and social – and embodies our belief in limitless progress and our pursuit of happiness, youth, longevity, sexual prowess, and freedom from a multitude of physical and emotional woes many of which, some would argue, are inherent in the human condition. Pills are both glorified and demonized, freighted by social and quasi-moral ramifications and propelled on to the marketplace by the euphoric hope that a “miracle” medication has been discovered.
While Maker is quick to credit her many and disparate artistic influences, she is also a believing Christian. The patient, obsessive attentiveness she gives to every aspect of her art practice and the ways in which the work lands so strongly on our heart and minds is Terry Maker’s confession of her faith.
Simon Zalkind, Curator
Read the Denver Post review by Ray Rinaldi:
Questioning the powers of medicine’s little helpers: Terry Maker explores our reliance on pills.
Read the article, OPEN WIDE, in the Winter, 2016 edition of Modern in Denver magazine.
Fulginiti Pavilion for Bioethics and Humanities - 13080 E. 19th Ave. Aurora, CO 80045
Free and Open to the Public