Featured Artist on “365 Artists, 365 Days” Blog

Gallery Owners Frank Juarez of Frank Juarez Gallery and Rachel Quirk and Zina Mussmann of Greymatter Gallery have started an ambitious blog project. Follow this link to see my feature from January 23, 2014:

Go to 365 Artists, 365 Days Blog

The interview:

Briefly describe the work you do.

My artwork is varied in media and approach. Much of my work is mixed media, incorporating found images, drawing, painting, and forms of printmaking all together. I also often work in sculptural installation and even collaborative performance. I use this diverse practice to investigate the unexplainable gap between our day-to-day physical experiences and scientific or cultural “truths”.

My current project is inspired by my visit this summer (2013) to Wuhan, China, where I spent 6 weeks teaching and traveling. Rich with texture, pattern, and ornament, the busy city sidewalks became an important physical and visual experience- heightening my awareness of both my need to avert the attentive gaze of those around me, and the varied and cobbled terrain of the growing urban landscape.

While I was there I made a large number of monotypes on traditional Chinese calligraphy paper with pigment, ink, and water, responding to the historical significance of these local materials and traditions. The process for making these works became public performance- carrying my materials with me as I walked, I brushed the sidewalk with water and ink often gaining attention and the assistance of curious passers-by. Sometimes alone surrounded by a skeptical crowd, but more often working together, we pressed the paper onto the wet surface, absorbing the water, ink, and dust left by the Wuhan air. The resulting prints become like archeological records, reflecting the contradictions embedded between China’s esteemed ancient customs and the fleeting nature of its quickly shifting populations and places.

Tell us a little about your background and how that influences you as an artist.

I moved around a lot both as a child and adult. I’ve lived in 9 different cities/towns including Detroit, Flint, Chicago and now Milwaukee for varying lengths of time. I often find myself thinking about navigation and how external influences like location change our understanding of our experiences. Recently influenced by my time in China, I have also started thinking about cultural landscapes- those places where humans’ physical alteration of the landscape becomes a reflection of those people’s attitudes about themselves. My process often starts with found sources like maps and historical records as points of reference to create works that explore experiences of observation, sensation, and fantasy.

The concept of the “artist studio” has a broad range of meanings, especially in contemporary practice. The idea of the artist toiling away alone in a room may not necessarily reflect what many artists do from day to day anymore. Describe your studio practice and how it differs from (or is the same as) traditional notions of “being in the studio.”

I tend to have different periods or categories of studio work that require different things from me. I definitely make work that benefits from that alone studio time- it is a reality of my practice. I also spend a lot of time using the internet as a resource and digital software for experimentation and research. When I am making sculptural work, it often starts with found objects, so the occasional trip to the salvage yard or surplus store becomes important studio time as well. But I also find great value in working with others. Collaboration a fantastic way to try new things and explore new territory. I am always open to a good collaborative project in my art making and in my teaching.

What unique roles do you see yourself as the artist playing that you may not have envisioned yourself in when you first started making art?

Lately I have been thinking much more intentionally about entrepreneurialism and the role of the artist as business owner. I recently took a class about the Lean Start-up model and finding all of the ways it applies to being an independent creative is pretty eye-opening but also really exciting.

When do you find is the best time of day to make art? Do you have time set aside every day, every week or do you just work whenever you can?

Working full time does impede my ideal studio routine, so during those busier parts of the school year, physical art making is more of a weekend thing. But there is so much else to do besides that physical making! There is thinking, planning, supply-attaining, application and proposal writing, opportunity finding, more writing, documenting, exhibition attending, and social networking to do during any “down time” I can muster. I really find that the only way I can get it all done is to have a very organized list and calendar system that reminds me what needs to be done each week.

How has your work changed in the last five years? How is it the same?

This time in 2008 I was in graduate school and was starting a project called Daily Navigation, a site-specific installation at the American Geographic Society Library. For this project, I recorded and mapped the common pathways of each of the AGSL librarians and hand-stitched those paths into the library carpet. It was a very public process, working on the ground among the library patrons. I definitely see a relationship with the process I worked with in China, making prints directly on the busy city street. In both cases, I was thinking about making a record, the interaction between the space and the people in it, and the process of public art making – though only one of the projects resulted in what would be called Public Art.

Are there people such as family, friends, writers, philosophers or even pop icons that have had an impact on the work you do?

In graduate school I read a lot of art theory and philosophy, but the truth is I don’t think about it that much anymore. Rosalind Krauss and Maurice Merleau-Ponty have provided ways of framing or describing my interests, but not in a way that I think is important for anyone else at this point.

If you had an occupation outside of being an artist, what would that be and why?

Well, I don’t really think that being an artist is my occupation, since I really don’t come close to making a living from my work exclusively. I am paid primarily as an art educator, and I love it because teaching art and design provides the opportunity to engage with core concepts of contemporary art practice everyday. But chances are that if I had not studied art, I would have taught something else- before I discovered I wanted a career in the arts, I thought I would be a school teacher. But I also realize my parents were very hands-off when it came to my plans for my life. I sometimes wonder what would have happened if I had been under any pressure to study something more economically respected, like medicine or computer programming (neither of which I showed any real promise for). But who knows- I’m not sure I showed any promise in art either. I just liked being around it and working with my hands in that way. I feel like success is mostly about how hard you work at whatever it is that you do.