Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

[The above image is “Elvis Has Left The Building” by Jacque Parsley.]

Jacque Parsley (jacqueparsley@gmail.com) might know what happened to the head of your old baby doll. If it’s lucky, it ended up as a part of one of her sculptures. A collection of cast-off objects becomes, in the hands of an artist like Parsley, a visual message that transcends the sum of the parts.

LEO: When did you start making art?

Jacque Parsley: I have always been interested in making things. Even as a little girl I began weaving potholders, crocheting and embroidering pillowcases and working on other forms of needle arts. I recently began collecting poems written by artists accompanied by their artwork for the Brooklyn Art Library “Sketchbook Project.” My contribution was “When Jacque Parsley was a babe in arms, she was already collecting little charms. Shadow boxes filled with dolls, covered all her bedroom walls.”

LEO: Explain how you make a collage for those who have not seen your work?

JP: I start out with a theme like flowers, dogs, birds, food or people like Frida Kahlo. Having decided on a theme, I collect all the images, stamps photos, toys, objects or information about the subject and sometimes go on a treasure hunt at flea markets and antique stores. If I am making a 3D assemblage I use both flat and sculptural objects, such as old drawers, washboards, trays and wooden hat forms for the basic structure. Then I start to glue, paste or nail the assembled items together. I begin with one main object or an image as a focal point. I keep everything the same scale and balance the piece with color, texture and repetition.

LEO: What is the most unusual object you have ever used in a collage?

JP: I have used false teeth, horse teeth, a turtle shell, golf clubs, bowling balls and bowling pins.

LEO: What is something people don’t know about you?

JP: I love comedy and a good joke. I can remember jokes from thirty years ago. I also love folk art.

LEO: What changes would you like to see in the art world in Louisville?

JP: I would like to see more murals, like the ones of Wil Sieg who did the murals of Slugger Field and Joe Ley, and Gibbs Rounsavall, who did a mural in Shelby Park. In a little town in Mexico — Pachuca — in the impoverished neighborhood of Palmitas, the Mexican government hired artists to paint a huge mural in bright colors that covered over 200 houses. As a result of that mural, crime was reduced by 30 percent and youth violence was virtually eradicated and the project created several jobs.

LEO: Of all the art that you have created, what is the one you are most proud of?

JP: I am most proud of some of the pieces I have in an exhibit at Galerie Hertz at this time, especially the one entitled “Why can’t we all get along?” I made this piece about a month before the Paris tragedy.

Do you have a news tip?

Subscribe to LEO Weekly Newsletters

Sign up. We hope you like us, but if you don't, you can unsubscribe by following the links in the email, or by dropping us a note at leo@leoweekly.com.

Signup

By clicking “subscribe” above, you consent to allow us to contact you via email, and store your information using our third-party Service Provider. To see more information about how your information is stored and privacy protected, visit our policies page.

Subscribe to LEO Weekly Newsletters

Sign up. We hope you like us, but if you don't, you can unsubscribe by following the links in the email, or by dropping us a note at leo@leoweekly.com.

To sign up now, enter your email address in the field below and click the Subscribe button.

By clicking “Subscribe” above, you consent to allow us to contact you via email, and store your information using our third-party Service Provider. To see more information about how your information is stored and privacy protected, visit our policies page.

Jo Anne Triplett is the contributing visual arts editor at LEO Weekly. She’s a past member of the Mayor’s Advisory Committee on Public Art, was the content advisor on the Glassworks Building...