THE 8701 Pacific St. Omaha, NE 68114 Volume 61 Issue 5
February 3, 2017
ANCE
* FEATURE Check out the diversity in-depth on pages 5-16
PICTURE PERFECT
Westside alumnus makes impact through social media
LIBBY S E L I N E picture of it to put in on social media. She always EDITOR-IN-CHIEF
Alumnus Emma Krenzer sat alone in Nebraska Wesleyan’s art room in the early hours of the morning on Monday, Jan 23. She was down on all fours. She squeezed paint onto her hands and rubbed them together so she could leave marks on her canvas: a naked picture of one of her friends. Her fingers left streaks of color on the photo creating unique patterns. She’d stand up. Look at it and study what she did. “Do what feels right,” she thought to herself. Swirls of faded paint along with green and blue handprints. She punched the canvas with her paint stained hands. As the night went on, her dark brown eyes would start to close, but the excitement of her artwork kept her awake. Every time she touched the painting a deep sense of intimacy burst inside of her. “I was really tired, but also really excited and empowered, too,” Krenzer said. “Just thinking about making a statement through art…I thought this was one of my more powerful statement pieces.” The next day the painting was due for her class Drawing 2. She hung up her painting and took a
did this. By the end of class, her tweet had 1,000 retweets. By the end of the day, she had 25,000. “I noticed it was getting a lot of attention… and I started to freak out a little because it was out of my hands,” Krenzer said. “At the same time [the attention] was so exciting to see that so many people liked my work and thought it was important enough to share it.” On Wednesday, Jan 11, Krenzer had been assigned to create a map for a class. She had always been fascinated with the significance of the human body, so she decided to create a map of human touch. Krenzer began creating the painting with the idea of showing touches from loved ones, but after attending the Women’s March in D.C., Krenzer had a different idea. “I was inspired by all the signs I saw at the march and the people coming together,” Krenzer said. “The solidarity and those empowering messages of women and bringing to light issues that are a lot of times kept private.” The event influenced her to bring attention to rape culture and objectification of women. She decided to do this by adding red paint to her painting and labeling the place as where “someone I told no” touched. The artwork touched a many people including
strangers. Krenzer claims many people reached out to via social media. “A lot of people have come forward and told me stories of their own sexual assault,” Krenzer said. “They say you know, ‘I don’t talk about this, but your piece made me want to talk about this…’ The fact that people are opening up to me about that is amazing, but [hearing their stories] is kinda scary because all of these people have their own story and I want to honor that and validate that the best I can.” Her former teacher, Westside art instructor Liz Dittrick is very proud of Krenzer’s accomplishments. “I think that the climate our culture is in right now, I think this was a good response to things and made people [about] things in a different way,” Dittrick said. “I [also] think it’s really fun to see students’ work being recognized at the level hers is. It’s [also] really encouraging for students here to see what their work can do now and in the future.” Krenzer is very pleased people were impacted by her piece. “It feels so great to know that so many people found something that I made to be powerful and important and also healing for them,” Krenzer said. “Just the fact that it prompted them to talk about these awful things that happened to them and not be silenced is really cool.”
Left: Alumnus Emma Krenzer poses for a photo at the Women’s March in D.C. on Saturday, Jan 21. Right: Alumnus Emma Krenzer’s painting sits on display during her class at Nebraska Wesleyan on Monday, Jan 23. Krenzer will be selling this photo to people and donating part of the profits to charity. Photos courtesy of Emma Krenzer