‘Yearnings for freedom’

Work by Alice Garik in her show “Veil, the Well, the Fire,’’ at The Lakes Gallery at Chi-Lin, Laconia, N.H., through Sept. 4

Ms. Garik explains:

“In this work I use the language of forms to connect physically and spiritually with the burden of enforced wearing of a head covering. The forbidding black forms above which the young girl rises, as she looks beyond as if into the future, hold and appear to subdue a woman below them. I also use the language of color—blue, the color of open skies is intertwined in the girl’s hair and the red lines are for the fires {in the Ala Khaki poem that goes with this work}. With these colors I speak of the yearnings for freedom for the women of Iran.’’

The 36-foot-high Memorial of Keewakwa Abenaki Keenahbeh, in Opechee Park, Laconia. During the dedication ceremonies, in September 1984, more than 3,000 attended, which included an estimated 100 members of the local Pennacook tribe, which is closely related to the Abenaki.