Udjat (1968), named after the ancient Egyptian Eye of Horus, a symbol of protection, comprises a text-covered box inside which small tusks sprout up around a central image of a mummified cat. The show’s titular work, Time Trembling (1969), is a small wooden cage containing a clay pot and an egg. Tawney left interpretation of her enigmatic works open, but said of her collages, “if you just want to take a glance then this isn’t for those people.” Time Trembling hints at Tawney’s elastic conception of temporality. A recurring motif in her collages and weavings is a circle bisected by a cross, which she said denoted the meeting of linear and eternal time at “the moment of being.”
Art and life were one in Tawney’s largely ascetic existence. Visiting her studio felt like walking into one of her assemblages on a grand scale, according to Kathleen Nugent Mangan, Executive Director of the Lenore G. Tawney Foundation. It was her sanctuary, filled with light, space, and serenity. “You felt like you were not on terra firma anymore,” Nugent Mangan says.
From the earliest days of her revolutionary woven forms in the early 60s, Tawney’s work had a transporting effect on its viewers. Agnes Martin evocatively described the sensation in a text she wrote for her friend’s first solo show in 1961: “It can be said that trembling and sensitive images are as though brought before our eyes even as we look at them; and also that deep and sometimes dark and unrealized feelings are stirred in us.”
There is that word “trembling” again, pointing to an emotive force that was perhaps rooted in the artist’s spirituality. Martin continued, “There is an urgency that sweeps us up, an originality and success that holds us in wonder.” They are sentiments that have only grown truer with time.