Academy Award-winning alumna screens new film

Melissa Marshall

Issue date: 3/20/08 Section: Arts
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On the set of Pam Boll's '78 new documentary chronicles the trials of motherhood and art.
Media Credit: Courtesy
On the set of Pam Boll's '78 new documentary chronicles the trials of motherhood and art.
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"Art is the soul of any culture," New Mexico-based artist Maya Torres said emphatically during one of her many interviews in the latest documentary from Middlebury College alumna and Board of Trustees Member Pamela Tanner Boll '78. But what happens when that culture is still prevalently patriarchal - especially when it comes to the commercial art industry? Part of a series of events sponsored by the Women's and Gender Studies Program, Chellis House and the Rohatyn Center for International Affairs in celebration of Women's History Month, the pre-theaterical release screening of "Who Does She Think She Is?" poignantly portrayed the issues of familial opposition, time constraints and critical apathy facing six different women artists in the United States.

Associate producer of the 2005 Academy Award-winning documentary "Born into Brothels" as well a mother to three sons, Bolls tries her hand at directing - crafting a moving account of the effects of a society that seems to esteem female creation of art even less than it values the creation of children and the demands of motherhood.

"We don't value motherhood - we say we do, but we don't," Boll said during a question-and-answer session after the screening. "We give it lip service the same way we give art lip service. Artists in this country, for the most part, live in the upmost poverty."

Even though Boll sought to explore the tensions created between mother and child in response to the mother's artistic pursuits, she instead encountered the strain placed upon a marriage when a wife balances her time between familial obligation and her own desire for creative expression. Three of the six women featured in the documentary were divorced - Providence-based actress Angela Williams' marriage deteriorating during filming.

Although Boll warned that, "I think that it's very difficult for a woman who does not have children to get this [documentary]," the theme of obligation versus dreams resounded with Middlebury students in attendance.
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Marna Ehrech '80

posted 3/31/08 @ 7:04 PM EST

It's so discouraging ... women pay so many times over for being female, in all aspects of life and living. That men don't have to make the same sacrifices and choices that women are forced to is maddening; that we as a culture haven't moved any further toward solving the problem, or at least lessening the cost for women and easing our burdens, is worse. (Continued…)

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