During the Coronavirus pandemic, Art Spiel is reaching out to artists to learn how they are coping.

Liz on the street
Liz Jaff creates installations, objects, outdoor interventions and drawings using formal structures, pattern and repetition to talk about permanence and impermanence, perceptions of time and the role of memory in shaping experience. Poetry, storytelling, Flamenco, Butoh theater and personal narrative are important influences. She lives and works in New York City.
AS: How are you coping?
LJ: I spent the first days arranging a workspace at home and getting organized for the foreseeable future. A regular schedule adds to a sense of order. I get up early each day and take long walks. For many years I have been casually making some urban interventions, and sharing them on social media keeps a connection to the bigger world beyond the small one I now maintain. I have elderly parents and check in on them throughout the day. It is crucial to stay healthy to care for them. Regular exercise and eating sensibly is a priority. I take dance classes through Zoom. The psychological component of all this is more complicated. I like quiet and there is a lot of it now so I am feeling I can think clearly. Trying to be smart with art making decisions is more challenging so for now I am concentrating on mechanical and process oriented tasks, making small studies and experimenting with materials. A thoughtful group of friends helps with feelings of isolation.

street intervention
AS: Has your routine changed?
LJ: My entire adult life I have gone to a job everyday. For 23 years I have worked at The Solomon R Guggenheim Museum caring for the works on paper collection. After April 12th I have been told I will no longer be paid by the Museum. This has been the biggest change logistically, financially and psychologically. My birthday was spent researching unemployment benefits and strategizing about keeping healthcare during the pandemic. I am used to having every moment of my day scheduled, being with the Museum collection, working at the studio, exercising, sharing time with family. Now there is no prescribed schedule. I can think even more and with the quiet am beginning to find even more clarity. Daydreaming and making art have a beautiful prominence.

street intervention
AS: Can you describe some of your feelings about all this?
LJ: It seems strange to say this, but I somehow feel prepared for this emotionally and logistically. Whatever I do not know can be figured out. There is community out there, so even with the social distancing I feel like we are here to help one another.

Study: Tease, 2020, hand cut paper on board
AS: What matters most right now?
LJ: The well-being of family, friends and those I do not really know very well. Each of us thrives when the entire community does. It has never felt more important to be careful and specific in what we choose to do each day and its effect on others.

Study: Decoy, hand cut paper on board
AS: Any thoughts about the road ahead?
LJ: One of the lessons for me so far has been about care – giving care to people, being thoughtful and deliberate in how we communicate with one another. I look forward to seeing how people come out of all this and to hearing about what they have learned. It will be great to share art and thoughts and smiles without being online or six feet away. The first hug is going to be great.

Trouble, 2018, hand cut paper on board
This interview is part of an Art Spiel x Cultbytes content collaborations in four parts within the framework of a COVID-19 special initiative ideated by Etty Yaniv.
Etty Yaniv works on her art, art writing and curatorial projects in Brooklyn. She founded Art Spiel as a platform for highlighting the work of contemporary artists, including art reviews, studio visits, interviews with artists, curators, and gallerists. For more details contact by Email: artspielblog@gmail.com