Monica Sjöö Explained

Monica Sjöö
Birth Date:31 December 1938
Birth Place:Härnösand, Västernorrland, Sweden
Death Place:Bristol, England
Movement:Anarchism
Ecofeminism
Feminist art movement
Goddess movement
Women's liberation movement
Spouse:
  • Stevan Trickey
  • Andrew Jubb
Children:3
Occupation:Painter, writer, radical anarcho/eco-feminist
Notable Works:God Giving Birth (1968, oil), The Great Cosmic Mother with Barbara Mor (1987)

Monica Sjöö (31 December 1938 – 8 August 2005) was a Swedish-born British-based painter, writer and radical anarcho/ eco-feminist who was an early exponent of the Goddess movement.[1] Her books and paintings were foundational to the development of feminist art in Britain, beginning at the time of the founding of the women's liberation movement around 1970.

Sjöö's most famous painting is God Giving Birth (1968), which depicts a woman giving birth and was inspired by Sjöö's religious view of motherhood; it sparked some protests from Christian groups in the 1970s.[2] She wrote or co-wrote the manifesto Towards a Revolutionary Feminist Art (1971) and The Great Cosmic Mother: Rediscovering the Religion of the Earth (1987).

Sjöö's art and writing became well-known outside of the UK, and throughout the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s she corresponded with influential American writers, artists and pagans such as Jean and Ruth Mountaingrove, Starhawk, Zsuzsanna Budapest, Shekhinah Mountainwater, Lucy Lippard, Alice Walker, and Judy Chicago.

Early life

Her parents were the Swedish painters Gustaf Arvid Sjöö (1902–1949) and Anna Harriet Rosander-Sjöö (1912–1965), who divorced when Sjöö was three years old.[3] She left school and ran away from home when she was 16.[4]

Sjöö traveled Europe and held a variety of jobs: she worked in vineyards and as a nude model at art schools in Paris and Rome.[5] She first came to Britain in the late 1950s, and eventually settled in Bristol where – except for a period in Wales in the early 1980s – she lived for the rest of her life.[6]

Career

Sjöö was the main author of Towards a Revolutionary Feminist Art (1971) one of the first, and most militant, feminist art manifestos. It was discussed widely in the feminist press, and The Guardian published an article in response.[7]

Sjöö wrote the original pamphlet[8] that, with Barbara Mor's re-write and expansion,[9] would become the book The Great Cosmic Mother (1987). It covers women's ancient history and the origin of religion, and is one of the first books to propose that humanity's earliest religious and cultural belief systems were created and first practised by women. It is currently in print and has been, and still is, a part of many women's studies, mythology and religious studies syllabi.[10] Her research and writing helped uncover the hidden history of the Goddess. Sjöö's successful use of interdisciplinarity in her research has led to its acclaim within the Goddess movement.[11]

Early exhibitions

Sjöö's first exhibition was at the Gallery Karlsson in Stockholm, Sweden in 1967.[12] Having been a founder member of the Bristol Women's Liberation group, in March 1971, she participated in the first "Women's Liberation Art Group" exhibition held at the Woodstock Gallery in London.[13] [14]

Margaret Harrison (1977) states that [on one occasion in 1970 several of Sjöö's paintings were banned from being shown in St. Ives during the St. Ives festival]. (...) "Monica then wrote in Socialist Woman (Nottingham) proposing forming a group or alliance of women artists. This led to the formation of the Bristol Women's Art Group (...)".[15]

Later exhibitions

Sjöö used imagery in her paintings which often references birth, the female body, and nature. All of these images were central to her beliefs regarding her "Cosmic Mother". She described herself as among the pioneers in this movement of reclaiming female divinity – along with many other writers, artists, poets, and thinkers. In her art, she attempted to "holistically express" her growing religious belief in the Great Mother as the cosmic spirit and generative force in the universe. This was a critical component of her artwork. She claimed to enter a "state" of being or of mind where knowledge was available from past, present, and future.

Sjöö's most famous painting, God Giving Birth (1968), depicts a woman giving birth, and has the title text painted in red capitalized letters. It is an expression of Sjöö's spiritual journey at that time, inspired by her religious experience during the birth of her second son, and represents her perception of the Great Mother as the universal creator of cosmic life. The painting and its concept created some controversy among Christian groups in the 1970s; at a group exhibition in London in 1973, it led to Sjöö being reported to the police for blasphemy, although the case was not taken up by the court.[16]

Beliefs

See also: Ecofeminism and Eco-spirituality. Sjöö's work and beliefs centered on her respect and care of the Goddess, or Mother Earth. The Goddess was "the beauty of the green earth, the life-giving waters, the consuming fires, the radiant moon, and the fiery sun". Sjöö's respect for nature and the environment was not mere belief but, for her, a spiritual truth. The Goddess / Earth is to be respected as the life giver. This respect is to be found not only in her imagery, but in two texts which chronicle her journey through the written word.[17] [18]

Yet, these abstract beliefs were grounded with a firm foundation of action and activism. She was involved with the anarchist and anti-Vietnam War movements in Sweden in the 1960s and was active in the women's movement in Britain. Her political activism always grew out of her spiritual understanding of the earth as our living mother, similar to the beliefs of some Native American peoples.

Sjöö was highly critical of many of the ideas and personages of the New Age movement, including Alice Bailey, J. Z. Knight and "Ramtha", and Gene Roddenberry for some of the ideas behind Star Trek.[19]

Reception

Starhawk described Sjöö's work as paintings that "transformed ancient images and symbols into contemporary icons of female power."[20] In 1976 Sjöö was the subject of a film documentary shown at the ICA and NFT.[21]

Personal life

Sjöö believed heterosexuality was an unnatural state imposed by patriarchy, and later in her life she enjoyed a number of intimate romantic relationships with women. (In the context of the 1980 essay by Adrienne Rich, "Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence".) However, after separating from her second husband, Andy Jubb, a composer, in the mid 1970s, Sjöö had an intense relationship with Keith Paton, a founder of the Alternative Socialist movement and, like Sjöö herself, a regular contributor to the alternative press, especially Peace News. Under Sjöö's influence, Paton changed his name to Motherson (or Mothersson).[22]

Two of her three sons died young. In 1985 her youngest, Leify, was killed in front of her by an oncoming car at age 15. Her eldest son, Sean, died of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma in 1987, aged 28.[23] She claimed that his death was exacerbated by his experiences of rebirthing.[24] Sjöö's grief at this double loss led first to an artistic paralysis akin to writer's block, and then to artistic expression, in the shape of the painting My Sons in the Spirit World (1989).

Sjöö died of cancer in 2005, aged 66.

Artwork

Exhibitions

Group exhibitions!Name!Year!Venue
Nine Morgens2003Glastonbury Goddess Conference
Windows to Otherworlds2002St Petersburgh State University, Russia
Neolithia Arts Festival2001–2002Gozo, Malta and (Germany)
II Mara II1999Dragonara Hotel, St. Julian's, Malta
Malta and Beyond1998Quan Yin Gallery, Oakland, California, US
"Hjartat sitter till vanster" (Heart is on the Left) radical art in Scandinavia from 1965 to 19751998Various in Scandinavia
North Current1998Varberg Museum, Sweden; Watermans Arts Centre, London, England; Gedok-Haus, Lubeck, Germany
Sharjah Biennial1997United Arab Emirates
With Your Own Face On1994–1995Various in England
Fantasy: Exchange exhibition with Arab women artists 1994Various is UAE
The Stones and the Goddess1990Gaia Book Store Gallery, Berkeley, California
Women Artists in Wales1984–1985Llandudno, Aberystwyth Arts Centre and Newport Arts Museum, Wales
Woman Magic: Celebrating the Goddess Within Us1979–1980Various in Europe
The Worlds as We See It1977Swiss Cottage Library, London
Kvinnfolk (Womenpeople)1975Kulturhuset, Stockholm, Sweden and Malmo Arts Hall
Women's Lives1974-1974Various in Scandinavia
Images of Womanpower1973Swiss Cottage Library, London
Women's Liberation Art Group1971Woodstock Gallery, London
Solo exhibitions!Name!Year!Location
Monica Sjöö: The time is NOW and it is overdue!2022Beaconsfield Gallery, Lambeth, London
2001Create Gallery, Bristol, England
2001Skellefta Women's Arts Museum, Sweden
2001Kebele Kulture Projekt, Bristol, England
Traveling Show1999–2000
1998Gaia Centre Galleri, Stockholm, Sweden
Touring Exhibition1994Various in Scandinavia
Women's Rites1994Liverpool, England
1967, Stockholm

Locations

Sjöö's art can be found in the Women's Art Collection at Murray Edwards College in Cambridge and at the in Skellefteå, Sweden. Some of her works are currently held in private collections of individuals: Sig Lonegren, Alice Walker, and Genevieve Vaughan hold a few, while Maggie Parks holds most of her art.[25] The Temple of Goddess Spirituality dedicated to Sekhmet holds Solar Lionheaded Sekhment of Primordial Fire (1992, oil on hardboard) where it is displayed in the living room of their guest house.[26] [27]

Written works

The Great Cosmic Mother

Books

Chapters

Articles

Poems

Pamphlets

Bibliography

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. News: Monica Sjoo. West. Pat. 23 September 2005. 7 December 2017. The Guardian.
  2. Web site: Blessed Be: Monica Sjöö, Konstnärshuset, Stora Galleriet, 24/8 – 17/9 2006. Slöör. Susanna. 29 August 2006. Omkonst. sv. 4 January 2018.
  3. Web site: My Life Story. Sjöö. Monica. Monica Sjöö. https://web.archive.org/web/20071023063120/http://www.monicasjoo.org/bio/autobiography.htm. 23 October 2007. 4 January 2018.
  4. Visibly Female: Feminism and Art Today – An Anthology. Sjöö. Monica. Moira Vincentelli. Universe Books. 1988. 9780876635407. Robinson. Hilary. New York. Monica Sjöö.
  5. Sjöö. Monica. Viv Honeybourne. Personal Histories of the Second Wave of Feminism. Feminist Archives South. 34–39. 9 February 2018. Monica Sjöö.
  6. Web site: A personal remembrance of Monica Sjöö. Smith. Jill. 2005. Monica Sjoo. https://web.archive.org/web/20071023113109/http://www.monicasjoo.org/trib/jillsmith.htm. 23 October 2007. 4 January 2018.
  7. Web site: Women have always defined themselves in relation to men. Stott. Mary. Art Cornwall.
  8. Web site: Sjoo. Monica. The Ancient Religion of the Great Cosmic Mother of All. Monica Sjoo. 9 December 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20160616121533/http://monicasjoo.org/books/cosmicmotherfirst.htm. 16 June 2016. dead.
  9. Monica Sjöö with Barbara Mor, The Great Cosmic Mother: Rediscovering the Religion of the Earth. San Francisco: Harper Collins, 1987. .
  10. Web site: Ratna Roy Papers, 1988–2009. Roy. Ratna. Archives West. 5. 10 December 2017.

    Web site: Watkins. June D.. REL3990 Women and Religion #2158 Special topic: Goddess Myths eLearning course 100% online. University of West Florida. 9 December 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20110112151241/http://uwf.edu/acad/syllabi/rel3990syllabus.pdf. 12 January 2011. 1. Spring 2011.

  11. Herndobler. Robin. September 1987. In The Spirit of the Goddess. The Women's Review of Books. 4. 12. 17. 10.2307/4020153. Filled with Sjoo's artwork, drawings of the Mother from every angle (literally), the book combines historical data from diverse sources, some long buried or suppressed, with penetrating analysis.. 4020153.
  12. Web site: Exhibitions. Monica Sjöö: An Online Retrospective. https://web.archive.org/web/20070807125648/http://www.monicasjoo.com/extras/exhibitions.html. 7 August 2007. 28 January 2018.
  13. Book: Framing Feminism: Art and the Women's Movement 1970 – 1985. Pandora Press. 1987. 978-0863581793. Parker. Rozsika. 2–4, 27–28, 181, 187–188, 191. Pollock. Griselda.
  14. Book: Walker, John A.. Left Shift: Radical Art in 1970s Britain. I.B.Tauris Publishers. 2002. 9781860647659. 45. In March, the Women's Liberation Art Group held their first show at the Woodstock Gallery, London..
  15. Harrison. Margaret. Margaret Harrison. 1977. Notes on Feminist Art in Britain 1970–77. Studio International. 193. 987. 212–220.
  16. Book: Raivio, Magdalena . 2007 . Transforming Reality or Reinforcing Stereotypes? On the Use of Birth-Giving as Metaphor in a Spiritual Ecofeminist Context . Stenström . Hanna . Vuola . Elina . Bieberstein . Sabine . Scandinavian Critique of Anglo-American Feminist Theology . Journal of the European Society of Women in Theological Research . 15 . Leuven . Peeters . 150 . 10.2143/ESWTR.15.0.2022774 . free . 978-90-429-1974-7 .
  17. Monica Sjöö with Barbara Mor, The Ancient Religion of The Great Cosmic Mother of All. Trondheim, Norway: Rainbow Press, 1981. .
  18. Monica Sjöö, New Age and Armageddon: The Goddess or the Gurus? Towards a Feminist Vision of the Future. London: Women's Press Ltd., 1994. . Reprinted as Return of the Dark/Light Mother or New Age Armageddon? Towards a Feminist Vision of the Future. Texas: Plain View Press. .
  19. Web site: Sjöö. Monica. New Age Channelings: Who or What Is Being Channeled?. 30 December 2017. https://web.archive.org/web/20110808131005/http://monicasjoo.org/books/naessay/newageessay1.htm. 8 August 2011. dead. Originally appeared in From the Flames: Radical Feminism with Spirit magazine, issue 2, winter 1998/99.
  20. Simos. Miriam. Starhawk. 2006. In Memory of Monica Sjöö. Femspec. 7. 1. 152.
  21. Web site: Portrait (Monica Sjoo). Jackson. Jane. 1976. Art Cornwall.
  22. Web site: Keith Mothersson Obituary. Archer. Colin. The Guardian. 5 October 2009 .
  23. Web site: My Sons in the Spirit World (oil, 1989). Sjöö. Monica. Monica Sjöö: An Online Retrospective. https://web.archive.org/web/20160808081808/http://www.monicasjoo.com/2014/03/28/my-sons-in-the-spirit-world/. 8 August 2016. 9 December 2017.
  24. Book: Sjoo, Monica. Return of the Dark/Light Mother or New Age Armageddon? – Towards a Feminist Vision of the Future. 1999. Plain View Press. 161–173. 1891386077.
  25. Web site: Monica Sjöö Memorial Trust. Monica Sjöö. https://web.archive.org/web/20071015134334/http://monicasjoo.org/ar-ex/memorial.htm. 15 October 2007. dead. 28 January 2018.
  26. Web site: Solar Lionheaded Sekhmet of Primordial Fire – 1992 (Oil on Hardboard). Sjöö. Monica. Monica Sjöö. https://web.archive.org/web/20071027140146/http://www.monicasjoo.org/art/retrospective/21r.htm. 27 October 2007. 28 January 2018.
  27. Web site: Living Room. 2017. Temple of Goddess Spirituality. 28 January 2018. 27 June 2022. https://web.archive.org/web/20220627024914/https://sekhmettemple.com/tour-the-goddess-temple/guest-house/living-room/. dead.