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Unlocking

A Memoir of Family and Art

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
While recovering from a near fatal illness, Nancy Pressly discovers a treasure trove of family material stored in her attic. Haunted by images of her grandparents and her parents in their youth, she sets out to create a family narrative before it is lost forever. It takes several more years before she summons the courage to reconstitute a path back to her own past, slowly pulling back the veil of amnesia that has, until now, all but obliterated her memory of her childhood.
In this sensitive and forgiving meditation on the meaning of family, Pressly unravels family dynamics and life in a small rural town in the 1950s that so profoundly affected her—then moves forward in time, through to her adulthood. With an eye attuned to visual detail, she relates how she came into her own as a graduate student in the tumultuous sixties in New York; examines how she assumed the role of caretaker for her family as she negotiated with courage and resilience the many health setbacks, including her own battle with pancreatic cancer, that she and her husband encountered; and evokes her interior struggle as a mother as she slowly traverses the barriers of expectations, self-doubt, and evolving norms in the 1980s to embrace a remarkable life as a scholar, champion of contemporary art, and nationally recognized art museum strategic planning consultant. Full of candor and art-inspired insight, Unlocking leaves the reader with a deep appreciation of the power of art and empathy and the value of trying to understand one's life journey.
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    • Kirkus

      April 15, 2020
      A memoir explores an art lover's family life and career. This account begins with photographs in Pressly's attic showing her ancestors from the shtetls of Eastern Europe. Her first-generation parents were hard workers who eventually made a comfortable life for themselves, the author, and her brother, Bobby, in America. Pressly describes her school days, first love--which brought out her father's scary, protective nature--and college life. In graduate school, she met and married a man named Bill. The author began a career as a museum curator, and Bill became a professor of art history. He remained a professor while the author sometimes adjusted her focus but stayed in the fields of art and curation. They confronted all sorts of career hurdles and, more importantly, health issues. Bill had serious heart problems, among other things. Pressly fared little better. In her 70s, she faced ampullary cancer, necessitating the very radical Whipple procedure and a long convalescence. Eventually, the couple moved to Atlanta to help their only child, David, cope with being the single parent of their two grandchildren. This is the author's second book; the first--Settling the South Carolina Backcountry (2016)--chronicles Bill's roots. She writes well. This is a woman of extraordinary passion and enormous energies. The test of a person (and for that matter, a marriage) is how the individual handles and overcomes the challenges of life. Pressly time and again passes the test with flying colors in this candid memoir. A side benefit: the illuminating chapters devoted to her thoughts on what it means to experience great works of art. (The volume features copious illustrations, both art plates and family photos.) In Florence, she admired Jacopo Pontormo's "enigmatic, strange, and beautiful" painting Deposition From the Cross (1526-28): "I was absolutely stunned by the intense, almost strident, pastel colors of the drapery, which in places clung so tightly to the grieving figures as to appear translucent." The author is a truly marvelous guide on a tour literally around the world, insisting that art reproductions in books are a poor second to the in situ experience that she convincingly describes as life changing. A wrenchingly honest account that deftly combines a marriage story and an art tour.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Library Journal

      May 1, 2020

      The subtitle of this memoir sums up this book--it is a story of family and art. Beginning with her family's genealogy, museum consultant Pressly (Settling the South Carolina Backcountry: The Pressly Family and Life Along Hard Labor Creek, 1767-1850) continues the narrative through her early life, weaving in family histories, as she relates her experiences and growth into adulthood through becoming a grandparent. Some dramatic points in her story are built up, and the point doesn't match the momentum. She clearly shows her passion for art, including her marriage to another art historian. Their story moves through sickness and health, world travel and art galleries, professional difficulties and successes. As she continues her story of her life with family and a career, she mentions specific pieces of art, and how they affected her. Images of the art are available in the book. Her descriptions were good, but the effect may be lost on a reader lacking knowledge or interest in such work. VERDICT This well-written memoir will please a specific audience who will identify with the author's zeal for museums, art, and art history.--Linda Gray, Blinn Coll., Brenham, TX

      Copyright 2020 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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