Monday, August 19, 2019

Sara Erenthal a runaway artist


At 17, in America, Sara Erenthal ran away from her Orthodox Jewish parents to avoid an arranged marriage. She went to Israel to live with family on a kibbutz. She battled her sense of shame as she learned to trust herself, fend for herself, and most important love herself. In her travails she grew up and eventually became a street artist.

Years later, she eventually came back to America to live in Bushwick, Brooklyn. She is a self taught artist who reclaims lost objects left on the street. She transforms these castaways into folk art and leaves it where she found it for someone to reclaim. “When I walk around, wherever I happen to be, and I see something in [a] trash pile outside, like a piece of furniture or a mattress, I like to draw on it and leave it there for people to enjoy. And often, actually, people grab it,’ she said.” (McLogan). Much of her art ends up being reclaimed by its former owners who saw new worth in their old castaways.

She began doing performance art where she stands on a stage in front of strangers and begins telling her story as she strips naked. “Erenthal began to unbraid her hair while the voiceover described her flight from the community, her loneliness, her first time putting on pants. She began to disrobe as she described her first pair of jeans, her difficulty finding her own sense of style, the difficulty of letting skin show for the first time, or letting people touch her body.” (Ungar-Sargon). She found it hard to be naked, physically and emotionally, as she told her life’s story.

On her website, Sara Erenthal, she posted some of her more memorable art. The captions she adds to the street art embellish the everyday objects. One such object is a board where she sketched and wrote: My Art Is..My Healing.” (saraerenthal.com). “Art operates as a kind of therapy for her. ‘Every time I make a piece I'm kind of letting go of something,’ she said.” (Ungar-Sargon). When Sara lets go of her art she is encouraging others accept her emotional release as a gift to others.