Helène Aylon was a good Jewish girl raised in orthodox Brooklyn,
married to a rabbi, and mother of two when her world split apart. A
widow at thirty, she broke free of tradition to become an eco-feminist
artist whose work deals in transgressive images about war and peace,
women's bodies, women and god, and the deeply religious world that
continues to influence her work to this day.
This memoir is a
charming dash through the years of a structured orthodox life and the
artistic life that freed her to question the misogyny of her beloved
religion. It is also a tell-all about the art world, with fascinating
details about luminaries such as Ana Mendieta, Ad Reinhardt, Mark
Rothko, and Betty Parsons.
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