I love your Web site!! Very interesting. Here is something I found at www.ebay.com, the online auction Web site [she found a patent medicine for menstruation]. Very rare item, I'd say! Keep up the wonderful work. [Many thanks!]
From Hamilton Spectator, October 1, 1999 |
Hi, Harry,I live outside of Toronto, Canada.There's almost a full page article in our local paper today about an Oakville, Ontario, artist who made a religious cleric's robe out of maxi pads [at left] (the work is entitled "Ultra-Maxi Priest").The second writer sent the article below from 30 September 1999 about it from the Toronto Globe and Mail newspaper; it mentions the current flap about the exhibit in New York City criticized by Mayor Giuliani as well as Ultra-Maxi "Priest."Title: Banned art work takes to the streetSubtitle: Maxi-pad robe deemed 'offensive'When an exhibition of work by Canadian artists of South Asian descent opens at the Oakville Municipal Building tomorrow night, one installation piece promised by the curator will not, strictly speaking, be on view.Ultra-Maxi "Priest" - a robe [at left] made of feminine-hygiene products by Toronto artist Tamara Zeta Sanowar-Makhan - has been barred from the town hall for being "offensive."Instead, Sanowar-Makhan, decrying what she calls an act of censorship, will stand outside the building wearing the offending robe. In addition, she has pulled paintings and photography that she had entered in Visual Raaga, a group exhibition that runs through Oct. 7."I am angry because I believe my piece belongs in the show," explained the 31-year-old artist. "I want to protest against the censorship of art, primarily by the Oakville Municipal Building, and the censorship of women's issues and the right to have them discussed and made public and valued."Meanwhile, Gillian McIntyre, executive director of the Oakville Arts Council, which helped fund the show, said "maxi pads are not personally offensive to me. But they are offensive to the people working and coming in and out of the town hall."Oakville town clerk Judith Muncaster concurred: "We are not a gallery and any work that is exhibited here should conform to public standards. It was not a subjective action. I was acting on complaints I had received about the work."The Oakville incident occurs in the wake of a maelstrom over art in New York this week. Mayor Rudolph Giuliani has threatened to withdraw $7-million (U.S.) in funding and possibly force the eviction of the Brooklyn Museum of Art over controversial works in a show of young British artists.In particular, Giuliani objected to Chris Ofili's painting of the Virgin Mary, which is studded with elephant dung and cutouts of female body parts from pornographic magazines. Giuliani, a Catholic, says the painting has a strong anti-Catholic bias hat is offensive to him and other practitioners of the faith.Sanowar-Makhan is also a Catholic and her censored installation piece includes a deliberate critique of the Church."The pads are symbolic," she offered. "The work is both a representation of female spiritual strength and a critique of the controlling and oppressive attitudes toward women by organized religion and specifically the Catholic Church, in which I was raised. That's why it's a priest's robe."Originally created in 1995, "Ultra-Maxi" Priest has been exhibited previously in Toronto without incident, as well as showcased in director Deepa Mehta's film "Kama Sutra."Still, Sanowar-Makhan is aware of the work's potential for controversy and says that during planning meetings for the exhibition in August she cautioned curator Navjot Verraich, as well as members of the OAC, that it might be too contentious for a public building.Her concerns were quelled, she said, by OAC board member and artist Steve Hudak, who told her that he felt the work was fine. Hudak even volunteered to help her install the piece.When reached yesterday, Hudak said he gave Sanowar-Makhan no guarantees the work would remain in the show if it raised problems for the exhibition as a whole."I said, let's put it up and see how it goes, if there's a problem, we'll have to take it down," recalled Hudak. |
Dear Mr. Finley,
I have read most of your story and all I can add is - to each their own and - go for it! I would have thought that a family doctor and a gynaecologist would be more than ideally suited on the subject of menstruation. [That's an example of menstruation being regarded as a medical rather than cultural topic.]
I think for a man to know as much about tampons and pads, then and now, as well as menstruation, is remarkable because so few men do and don't want to know. I believe a man in a traditional relationship, you know, woman and man, should know how a woman's body works, including her menstrual cycle and how it affects her body and her emotional and/or psychological self. That way he can be supportive of her when she is menstruating.
Taboos, especially about the female body, are rather ridiculous, whether one is discussing menstruation, pads, tampons or genitals or breasts. I guess we can thank religion [see the page on religion and menstruation] for that. By the way, I'm not a theist. Religion is not open minded and is mostly misogynist and I'm aware that women and menstruation and the ability to birth a child and breast feed, are often treated with disgust and contempt. These are things that women, not men, have the ability to do.
Well, I've gone on long enough. I first read about your MUM in Canada's national newspaper and kept the article and was going to do just that - write to ask you WHY would a man want to create a museum like this. Now I don't have to.
Continued success . . . .
Please, may I post a letter on your letter page?
I'm researching a documentary for the BBC [British Broadcasting Corporation] about menstruation - myths and facts and blessing or curse.
I have much information about the curse and prejudice but I am finding scant information about the blessing! I was thrilled to find medical information linking surgery for breast cancer and the menstrual cycle and the New Scientist report about differing medication levels required during the 28-day cycle, and the research about eating requirements differing during the cycle etc., but I want to hear from women who have evidence of the cycle as a blessing, for example, artists, writers, etc., who are at their most creative whilst menstruating.
I also want to meet women who practice menstrual seclusion, as with menstrual huts of the past [and of the present; women still use menstrual huts].
And anything and everything to do with research into menstruation.
Next week I am interviewing Mr Peter Redgrove and Penelope Shuttle who wrote the first book on menstruation that offered positive information, The Wise Wound, 1978. I am very excited about asking many questions resulting from the book. If you have any questions for them pertaining to the book or their second book, Alchemy for Women, about the dream cycle corresponding to the menstrual cycle, I would be delighted to forward them to them on your behalf. They are not on the net so any questions would have to have addresses!
Thank you so much for this glorious Web site [many thanks to you for saying that!] and I look forward to hearing from visitors to your site.
Ali Kedge.
ali@shortkedge.freeserve.co.uk or fflic.zip@business.ntl.com
Irregular menses identify women at high risk for polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS), which exists in 6-10% of women of reproductive age. PCOS is a major cause of infertility and is linked to diabetes.