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FROM THE INTERVIEW:
"I miss my studio and I’m kind of irritated that I can’t be in it, but on the other hand it's a nice opportunity to avail myself of a different circumstance, to take stock of what’s possible and see what I can do with this limited circumstance. I also like that life is a little slower, and I can just sit and look out the window a little more often than usual. It’s bittersweet. It’s one thing to cultivate my life inside my house and do the best that I can, which is what we all do, and another thing to read the news and know what’s happening outside my house, how upset the world is, and how many people are really suffering."
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ABOUT THE ARTIST
Jessica Stockholder (b. 1959, USA) is an internationally acclaimed visual artist and educator who lives and works in Chicago. Her public artworks have been commissioned by museums, municipalities, and corporations around the world.
As an artist, Stockholder is inspired by the relationships she perceives between colors and objects in her everyday visual environment. Her work employs the visual strategies of painting, sculpture, and installation—though it also resists the limitations such terms imply.
Another word sometimes used to describe what Stockholder does is “assemblage,” though that term is also not quite sufficient. Assemblage artists perceive of consumer products, manufactured objects, and industrial materials—the cast-off physical residue of human civilization—as artistic objects in themselves, or as artistic mediums equally valid as paint, stone, or glue.
Jessica Stockholder, Door Hinges (installation view), 2016, Kavi Gupta | Elizabeth St., Chicago, IL.
Stockholder indeed utilizes “readymade” articles along with traditional artistic mediums, but not in an attempt to make an object, per se. Rather, she is endeavoring to create a human experience by formulating three-dimensional pictures in space, which interact in unpredictable ways with the environments they occupy.
Whether working on a small scale, such as creating an assemblage that will hang on a wall, or a massive scale, such as creating a sculptural installation that extends from inside a building to the outside, she is exploring a larger concern: people’s perception of their visual surroundings, and how that perception relates to feelings of chaos and control.
Stockholder’s work is in the permanent collections of LACMA, The British Museum, London, the Art Institute of Chicago, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam, Saatchi & Saatchi Collection, London, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, and many others.
Jessica Stockholder, Door Hinges (installation view), 2016, Kavi Gupta | Elizabeth St., Chicago, IL.
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Assisted, Curated by Jessica Stockholder
Kavi Gupta | 219 N. Elizabeth St. Chicago, IL, 60607 12 September 2015 - 16 January 2016Featuring works by Laylah Ali Polly Apfelbaum Anthony Caro Patrick Chamberlain Cheryl Donegan Jessica Jackson Hutchins Sol LeWitt Nancy Lupo Rebecca Morris Sam Moyer Jo Nigoghossian Stephen Prina Michael Queenland Kay Rosen Haim Steinbach Tony Tasset ASSISTED, curated by Jessica Stockholder, follows on two earlier related ventures and accompanies her solo exhibition titled Door Hinges at Kavi Gupta in Chicago this September. -
Jessica Stockholder, Door Hinges
Kavi Gupta | 219 N. Elizabeth St. Chicago, IL, 60607 12 September 2015 - 16 January 2016Kavi Gupta is pleased to present Jessica Stockholder’s first solo exhibition in Chicago in 24 years. -
Jessica Stockholder, Stuff Matters
Centraal Museum, Utrecht, The Netherlands 19 April - 1 September 2019This summer, Centraal Museum presents Jessica Stockholder: Stuff Matters. Jessica Stockholder (USA, 1959) came to fame in the early 1990s with colourful and picturesque as well as monumental installations. In her work, Stockholder combines all sorts of everyday items – ranging from umbrellas and cushions to furniture and lamps – to form an overwhelming composition. Through her playful manipulation of form and colour, she is able to transform the entire room. -
Jessica Stockholder, Angled Tangle, 2014
Art Basel Miami Beach 2014 4 - 7 December 2014Kavi Gupta proudly presented Angled Tangle, Jessica Stockholder’s site-responsive sculpture at Art Basel Miami Beach Public 2014. -
Jessica Stockholder, Relational Aesthetics
The Contemporary Austin | Austin, TX 15 September 2018 - 3 March 2019This exhibition of the work of Chicago-based artist Jessica Stockholder (American-Canadian, born 1959 in Seattle, Washington, and raised in Vancouver, British Columbia) will span both of The Contemporary Austin’s venues. At the entryway to Laguna Gloria, Stockholder has created a new outdoor sculpture commission, Save on select landscape & outdoor lighting: Song to mind uncouples, 2018, which will be on view in late 2018. Bringing painting into three-dimensional space, Stockholder uses everyday objects as building materials, celebrating the potential for color, form, and abstraction to generate meaning in tandem with the environment and surrounding architecture. The artist’s first solo presentation in Texas in over a decade, Relational Aesthetics includes a new, painted architectural installation—which she refers to as a “situation”—that doubles as a viewing platform and pedestal. A selection of new and recent sculptures are also on view, some of which incorporate found electronic elements. Also included are other works Stockholder calls “assists”—sculptures that require support in order to stand upright. -
Jessica Stockholder, Save on Select Landscape & Outdoor Lighting: Song to Mind Uncouples
The Contemporary Austin Laguna Gloria | Austin, TX 1 April 2019 - 1 April 2020With the eye of a painter, Chicago-based artist Jessica Stockholder is attentive to how color, form, and abstraction embedded in everyday objects are affective and meaningful. Prefabricated street lamps, grating, and bollards work together to create geometric form, both using volume and as a two-dimensional image. The lines between colors and the edges between materials function as drawing, shaping continuity between parts that includes negative space—such as the triangular volume of air held between the flat orange triangle on the platform and the green arms of the lamp heads above. The top of one lamp morphs into a lump of resin, divided in two by color; the line between the two colors suggests that the orange half of the shape is pushed up against a large green triangle and left dangling in the vast uncharted space outside of the sculpture. As a viewing platform, the work draws the surrounding landscape into its vortex. “Song to mind uncouples” is a line from a poem by bpNichol (1944–1988).
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