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24 June 2025
The Curriculum of Rejections
When
Rejection Becomes My Art, and My Art Becomes My Humanity
Before
We Begin
I love to
write about contemporary art.
Not because I have to, but because I simply cannot resist.
Art pulls me in deeply, persistently, sometimes even obsessively.
I study contemporary movements, uncover forgotten voices, follow radical
thinkers.
I read, research, question, and reflect.
While I examine the giants, I am equally captivated by those who remained in
the shadows, artists who created not for applause but because they had
something urgent to express.
Alerne Rush - Rejection, Reject, Re... Installation at Pen and Brush (2014-2019)
I believe
art should never ask for permission.
It should not compromise for critics.
It should not bend for the marketplace or seek the approval of curators.
It should exist because it must.
For me, art
has always been about coherence, about truth, about standing firm in your voice
even when no one is listening.
Art is not a strategy. Art is existence.
And yet, I
am human.
Even for someone who consciously chooses to live outside the rules of the game,
rejection still cuts deep.
This is one of those stories, not about triumphs, but about vulnerability.
And about how I found comfort and strength in the voices of others.
That
White Wall
Not long
ago, I invested myself fully in an art project.
I submitted my paintings to a major international competition.
I spent countless hours perfecting my portfolio, refining my statement,
polishing every detail.
I even exchanged emails with the curators. The conversations were encouraging.
Everything seemed aligned.
And in my
mind, I saw it already:
My works displayed on those tall, immaculate museum walls.
Visitors standing in front of them, spotlights illuminating every nuance.
I wasn’t longing for glory, only for inclusion.
I didn’t dream of winning; I simply wished to be seen.
And then:
silence.
That white wall remained blank, waiting.
The shortlist was published.
My name was missing.
No explanation. No feedback. Not even a simple "Thank you for
submitting."
Just emptiness.
The
Invisible Weight of Rejection
For
artists, rejection carries a unique weight.
It isn’t merely a closed door; it feels like a quiet, personal verdict:
You are not
good enough.
But heavier
than external rejection is the internal echo:
Maybe I’m
not talented enough. Maybe I should stop. Maybe I should throw away my brushes.
And most
toxic of all is the silence we impose on ourselves.
Because rejection, in art as in life, carries not only pain but shame.
But here
lies a crucial truth:
Failure
and rejection are not the same.
Failure
means we have stopped.
Rejection means we are still trying.
Every rejection is proof that we continue moving forward. That we still
believe. That we are still creating.
There is
no shame in rejection. There is humanity.
The Hand
And then, a
small light appeared: Aviva Rahmani.
“Maybe I
could tell Aviva?”
Aviva is
not just an artist; she is the towering "Big Mama" of ecofeminist
art. But even more, she is a voice of coherence, vision, and integrity.
She had
publicly shared her own rejection from a major fellowship on social media.
Even her?
That small
act of honesty brought me comfort.
If someone like her, with decades of experience, still faces rejection,
perhaps my wound wasn’t so shameful after all.
I hesitated
for days. Then I wrote.
She replied
almost immediately:
"Rejection
is the hardest part of being an artist. It can also be the best teacher."
Later she
added:
"Rejection
is awful. It tests our vision for ourselves as artists. It’s unfair and cruel.
We’re entitled to self-pity and resentment. A friend of mine, Arlene Rush, once
created an entire installation of her rejections."
That
sentence opened a door. And everything began to shift.
Discovering
The Art of Rejection Exposed
I searched.
And I found it:
"Rejection, Reject, Re..." by Arlene Rush.
A wall.
Golden envelopes displayed like sacred relics.
But they weren’t trophies, they were scars, exposed with dignity.
The
envelopes were crafted with imitation gold leaf, resin, wax, and archival
materials, shining under the lights like fragile icons of vulnerability.
Inside the
envelopes: nothing.
Each was deliberately empty, a haunting metaphor for the silence that so often
follows rejection.
On each envelope was written the name of the institution that had rejected her.
She made
visible what most of us hide.
She transformed absence into presence.
She transformed vulnerability into strength.
Silver
Lining (2018): The Letters Released
Later, in
her installation Silver Lining (2018), Arlene allowed the rejection
letters themselves to physically emerge.
Here, letters are placed inside the envelopes, some even spilling out — as if
the once-concealed wounds could no longer remain contained.
The silence of Rejection, Reject, Re... gives way to full disclosure:
rejection no longer hidden, but fully exposed.
"Sorry
to Inform You"
Arlene
didn’t stop there.
In her
video piece "Sorry to Inform You", she created a brutal
soundscape, endlessly repeating the bureaucratic phrases so familiar to every
artist:
"We
regret to inform you..."
"Unfortunately..."
"After careful consideration..."
"Thank you for submitting; however..."
A hypnotic
loop of standardized dismissal.
Rejection is not personal, it is systematized, industrialized.
And through
Arlene’s voice, this institutional violence gained its proper emotional weight.
A collective, universal wound.
Evidence
of Being: The Collective Monument
But her
most profound work was still to come:
Evidence of Being.
Rejection
became not personal, but collective.
At Art
in Odd Places in New York, Rush installed:
- Waterproof printed rejection
letters
- Portable speakers playing
rejection statements
- Informational panels and flyers
- Foam core displays
- Silicone wristbands reading
“Evidence of Being”
At first,
wristbands were exchanged for visitors' own rejection letters, which were
pinned to the telephone booths.
But as interest grew, people began sharing rejections from every corner of life
— from schools, jobs, relationships, families.
It became
cathartic.
It brought connection.
It brought unity.
Vulnerability
became shared humanity.
What started as Arlene’s story became everyone’s story.
The
Unexpected Friendship
Even across
oceans, Evidence of Being resonated.
Irish
artist and educator Brigitta Varadi incorporated Rush’s work into her
teaching in Ireland.
Later, by coincidence, the two women met at an exhibition opening, one
arriving, the other leaving.
Brigitta
ran toward Arlene, called her by name, and shared how deeply her work had
touched her and her students.
From that moment, a deep friendship was born.
And in a
way, something similar happened to me, though 4000 miles away.
While searching and discovering Arlene’s work, I was drawn into her world.
And now, through this article, I hope that what I share is not only a tribute
to Arlene’s art, but also a wider invitation:
To reflect,
to see the deeper meaning of art, and perhaps to carry this awareness into your
own life.
Because rejection is not exclusive to artists, we all face it, almost daily,
in countless forms.
This is
the power of vulnerability: it unites us.
My Own
Curriculum of Rejections
Something
inside me shifted.
I decided
to create my own Curriculum of Rejections, not a list of successes, but
of scars.
Not for
pity.
Not for sympathy.
But as evidence of being.
Each
rejection proves that I keep going.
They are not failures. They are my path.
Ironically,
as I reviewed Arlene’s résumé, I smiled:
My
rejection list may even be longer than her Achievements CV.
And there’s
beauty in that too.
Salvator
Mundi
At the same
time, I couldn’t help but reflect on the absurdity of the art market.
Salvator
Mundi, attributed
to Leonardo da Vinci, sold for nearly half a billion dollars.
Yet doubts remain whether Leonardo truly painted it.
Its price
is based not on certainty, but on mythology.
What is the
value of my Curriculum of Rejections?
Monetarily: nothing.
Humanly: everything.
The
Silent Lesson at GAM Torino
Around the
same time, I visited GAM Torino.
I saw a
Warhol displayed beside lesser-known artists. No hierarchy. No boasting.
The curator presented works as equals, not based on fame, but on dialogue.
Andy Warhol - Orange Car Crash
This is how
art should be:
Not a competition.
Not a pyramid.
But a conversation of souls.
The
Feminist Core
Why was it
Arlene Rush, a woman, who created this body of work?
Because men, raised in patriarchal cultures, are taught to equate worth with
victory.
We hide
rejection. We hide vulnerability.
But women like Arlene reclaim what many men still fear:
The
truth that our humanity lives not in our victories, but in our wounds.
This is not
only artistic, it is existential. It is political.
Women
artists have shown what it means to remain fully human in art.
My Art
Provocation
A memory:
As a child in my tennis club, I loved the game, not the competition.
From that moment, rejection followed me.
Yet my life
unfolded in coherence.
And so,
I’ve made a decision:
My next
portfolio will not begin with my accomplishments, but with my Curriculum of
Rejections.
A portfolio
that starts with scars.
Not for attention.
Not for bitterness.
But as provocation. As truth.
"This
is me. These are my scars. If you dare turn the next page, then let my art
speak."
The
Future We Should Teach
If I could
express one wish, it would be this:
Evidence
of Being belongs at
the entrance of every art institution.
It should be taught in every art school.
Because so
many young artists dream, and dreaming is beautiful.
But they also need to know:
Behind
every spotlight, there are wounds.
Rejection is not an exception. It’s part of the journey.
True artistry lies not only in victories, but in resilience.
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