Ellen Lesperance

Last updated
Ellen Lesperance
BornDecember 22, 1971
Minneapolis, Minnesota, US
EducationSkowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture
Alma materUniversity of Washington, Rutgers University
Website http://www.ellenlesperance.com

Ellen Lesperance (born 1971) is an American artist and educator, known for her paintings. Her works are typically gouache paintings that pattern the full-body garments of female activists engaged in Direct Action protests. [1] She is based in Portland, Oregon, and has three children. [2]

Contents

Early life and education

Lesperance was born in 1971 in Minneapolis [3] and raised in Seattle. She was raised in a large, mixed-race family with adopted siblings, which she cites as providing her with "raw, tangible feelings regarding inequity and what it means to fight for justice." [4] She attended Roosevelt High School. She continued her studies at University of Washington School of Art (BFA 1995), Mason Gross School of the Arts at Rutgers University (MFA 1999), and Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture (1999). [5] [ better source needed ]

Career and work

Ellen Lesperance employs various art mediums, but she often relies upon the visual language of knitting patterning. [6] In a 2017 article for Frieze magazine, Jen Kabat writes that Lesperance's work "transmits messages about history, feminism and labour through the art of knitting." [7] Citing inspiration from years of working as a pattern knitter for Vogue Knitting magazine, Bauhaus-era female weavers, the Pattern and Decoration Movement, and body-based feminist artists of the 1970s and 1980s, Lesperance's gouache paintings on paper can be followed as patterns to recreate historic knit garments. [8] She sources these historic garments from archival images and film footage of women involved in Direct Action protest, including women from: the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp, the 1999 Seattle WTO protests, Earth First!, Occupy events, feminist-era protest events, and the feminist art canon. [9] Through studying activists' visual strategies, Lesperance "recognized that Creative Direct Action provides a powerful model for politically-inclined artists... but unfortunately it is creative making that exists outside the purview of contemporary art." [10] In a 2018 review for Artforum, Claire Lehmann describes the paintings as "reanimations of agitators' attire." [11] "Combining the aesthetic pleasure of color field painting, the inexplicable scopophilic compulsion inspired by grids, and the haptic quality of fiber arts into a single composition that also evokes a political tradition is no small feat," art historian R.H. Lossin writes of Lesperance's paintings. [12]

She was an assistant professor at the Pacific Northwest College of Art, where she resigned in 2016 after leading the failed unionization attempt of the school's adjunct faculty. [13] She additionally chaired the Painting Department of the Maine College of Art. [14] [ when? ]

She has received many awards including a Fulbright (2022-2023), [15] a Guggenheim Fellowship (2020), [16] the Pollack Krasner Foundation fellowship (2014–2015), The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award (2017), [17] the Ford Family Foundation Fellowship, a Hallie Ford Fellowship in the Visual Arts from the Seattle Art Museum(2012), [14] and a Robert Rauschenberg Foundation Artist-as-Activist Grant. [18] She is the author of Peace Camps (Container Corps, 2015) [19] and Velvet Fist (2020). [20] In 2022, she was named a 2022-2023 Fulbright Global Scholar as an unaffiliated independent scholar to conduct research titled Peace Women Knitwear: Greenham Common and Beyond in Australia, Italy and the U.K. [21]

Lesperance is also the organizer of the sweater rental project Congratulations & Celebration, [2] in which a recreation of a Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp jumper is mailed around the world to motivate acts of courage. [22]

Exhibitions

Selected exhibitions include the following:

Collections

Ellen Lesperance's work is included in the collections of:

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Helen Frankenthaler</span> American painter (1928–2011)

Helen Frankenthaler was an American abstract expressionist painter. She was a major contributor to the history of postwar American painting. Having exhibited her work for over six decades, she spanned several generations of abstract painters while continuing to produce vital and ever-changing new work. Frankenthaler began exhibiting her large-scale abstract expressionist paintings in contemporary museums and galleries in the early 1950s. She was included in the 1964 Post-Painterly Abstraction exhibition curated by Clement Greenberg that introduced a newer generation of abstract painting that came to be known as color field. Born in Manhattan, she was influenced by Greenberg, Hans Hofmann, and Jackson Pollock's paintings. Her work has been the subject of several retrospective exhibitions, including a 1989 retrospective at the Museum of Modern Art in New York City, and been exhibited worldwide since the 1950s. In 2001, she was awarded the National Medal of Arts.

Jessica Jackson Hutchins is an American artist from Chicago, Illinois who is based in Portland, Oregon. Her practice consists of large scale ceramics, multi-media installations, assemblage, and paintings all of which utilize found objects such as old furniture, ceramics, worn out clothes, and newspaper clippings. She is most recognizable for her sloppy craft assemblages of furniture and ceramics. Her work was selected for the 2010: Whitney Biennial, featured in major art collections, and has been exhibited throughout the United States and internationally, in Iceland, the UK, and Germany.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Stephanie Syjuco</span> Filipino-born American conceptual artist, educator (born 1974)

Stephanie Syjuco, is a Filipino-born American conceptual artist and educator. She works in photography, sculpture, and installation art. Born in the Philippines, she moved to the San Francisco Bay Area in 1977. She lives in Oakland, California, and teaches art at the University of California, Berkeley.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Mickalene Thomas</span> American painter

Mickalene Thomas is a contemporary African-American visual artist best known as a painter of complex works using rhinestones, acrylic, and enamel. Thomas's collage work is inspired from popular art histories and movements, including Impressionism, Cubism, Dada, the Harlem Renaissance, and selected works by the Afro-British painter Chris Ofili. Her work draws from Western art history, pop art, and visual culture to examine ideas around femininity, beauty, race, sexuality, and gender.

Wynne Greenwood is a queer and lesbian feminist performance artist who works in various media such as installation art, photography, filmmaking and music. One of her well known projects include the electropop and video project group, Tracy + the Plastics. Wynne works out of Seattle, Washington, and was an instructor in the Department of Art and Art History at Seattle University.

Robyn O'Neil is an American artist known for her large-scale graphite on paper drawings. She was also the host of the podcast "ME READING STUFF". In 2023, she retired from the art world by posting a Kristy McNichol quote on her Instagram account. She launched a new podcast, called ROBYN'S GATE, in early 2024.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Amy Pleasant</span> American painter (born 1972)

Amy Pleasant is an American painter living and working in Birmingham, AL.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ellen Harvey</span> American-British conceptual artist

Ellen Harvey is an American-British conceptual artist known for her painting-based practice and site-specific works in installation, video, engraved mirrors, mosaic and glass. She frequently pairs traditional representational vocabularies and genres with seemingly antithetical postmodern strategies, such as institutional critique, appropriation, mapping and pastiche. Her work examines such themes as art as a mirror, interactions between built environment and landscape, ruins and the Picturesque aesthetic, and cultural and economic relationships between museums, artists and publics. Curator Henriette Huldisch writes of her work, "haunted as it is by the notion of art's ultimate futility, her paradoxical stake is in persistently testing art's possibility to do something in the world after all."

Bettina Sellmann is a German artist.

Cynthia Carlson is an American visual artist, living and working in New York.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cecilia Vicuña</span> Chilean poet, artist and filmmaker

Cecilia Vicuña is a Chilean poet and artist based in New York and Santiago, Chile.

Maren Hassinger is an African-American artist and educator whose career spans four decades. Hassinger uses sculpture, film, dance, performance art, and public art to explore the relationship between the natural world and industrial materials. She incorporates everyday materials in her art, like wire rope, plastic bags, branches, dirt, newspaper, garbage, leaves, and cardboard boxes. Hassinger has stated that her work “focuses on elements, or even problems—social and environmental—that we all share, and in which we all have a stake…. I want it to be a humane and humanistic statement about our future together.”

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Polly Apfelbaum</span> American visual artist (born 1955)

Polly E. Apfelbaum is an American contemporary visual artist, who is primarily known for her colorful drawings, sculptures, and fabric floor pieces, which she refers to as "fallen paintings". She has lived in New York City, New York since 1978.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Jina Valentine</span> American artist

Jina Valentine is a contemporary American visual artist whose work is informed by the techniques and strategies of American folk artists. She uses a variety of media to weave histories—including drawing, papermaking, found-object collage, and radical archiving.

Joan Nelson is a visual artist who lives and works in upstate New York. For over three decades, Nelson has been making "epic and theatrical landscape paintings," borrowing from art history and re-presenting iconic vistas from the Fine Art lexicon including those of the Hudson River and Mount Hood.

Liz Magic Laser is an American visual artist working primarily in video and performance. She is based art in Brooklyn, New York.

Eline McGeorge is a Norwegian artist who lives and works in London and Oslo, Norway. She has exhibited extensively in Norway and internationally.

Marlon Mullen is a painter who lives and works in Contra Costa County, California, maintaining a studio practice at NIAD Art Center.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lynn Aldrich</span> American sculptor

Lynn Aldrich is an American sculptor whose diverse works draw on a wide range of high and low cultural influences and materials. Her work can range from what art writers describe as "slyly Minimalist meditations" on color, light and space to whimsical "Home Depot Pop" that reveals and critiques the excesses—visual, formal and material—of unbridled consumption. Critics Leah Ollman and Claudine Ise of the Los Angeles Times have described Aldrich's art, respectively, as a "consumerist spin on the assemblage tradition" and a "witty and inventive brand of kitchen-sink Conceptualism" LA Weekly critic Doug Harvey calls her "one of the most under-recognized sculptors in L.A.," whose hallmarks are the poetic transformation of found/appropriated materials, formal inventiveness and restless eclecticism. Aldrich has exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (MOCA), Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Hammer Museum, Santa Monica Museum of Art, and venues throughout the United States and Europe. She has been recognized with a Guggenheim Fellowship (2014) and public art collection acquisitions by LACMA, MOCA Los Angeles and the Portland Art Museum, among others.

Brie Ruais is an American artist based in Brooklyn, New York, working in large “multi-faceted” ceramic sculptures, performance, photography, video, and site-specific installation.

References

  1. "Ellen Lesperance". New York: Derek Eller Gallery. November 6, 2018.
  2. 1 2 "Seeking Out Imperfection with Ellen Lesperance". BmoreArt. 2020-04-08. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  3. "Artist Talk: Ellen Lesperance". Rose Art Museum, Brandeis University. Archived from the original on 2020-10-30. Retrieved 2020-11-01. Ellen Lesperance (b. 1971, Minneapolis, MN)
  4. "Knit, Purl, Protest: The Radical Feminist Stitchcraft of Ellen Lesperance". Archived from the original on 2016-01-10. Retrieved 2021-04-05.
  5. "ELLEN LESPERANCE". Portland, Oregon: Adams and Ollman. Retrieved 2019-12-09.
  6. "Ellen Lesperance (September 6 – October 7, 2018)". Derek Eller Gallary. Retrieved 2019-12-09.
  7. "Ellen Lesperance - Frieze". frieze.com.
  8. Rattemeyer, Christian (2013). Vitamin D2: New Perspectives in Drawing. Phaidon Press. ISBN   0714865281.
  9. "Ellen Lesperance - It's Never Over - Ambach and Rice - Los Angeles". Art Splash. 2013-02-16. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
  10. Rosenberg, Karen (January 8, 2016). "Knit, Purl, Protest: The Radical Feminist Stitchcraft of Ellen Lesperance". Art Space. Retrieved April 19, 2016.
  11. "Ellen Lesperance". Derek Eller Gallery. December 2018.
  12. 1 2 Lossin, R.H. (2020-11-14). "Ellen Lesperance's "Together we lie in ditches and in front of machines". Art Agenda. Retrieved 2021-04-05.
  13. Van Houten-Maldonado, Devon (April 21, 2016). "Treatment of Adjuncts Spurs Protests at Pacific Northwest College of Art". Hyperallergic. Retrieved April 5, 2021.
  14. 1 2 "Ellen Lesperance". The Ford Family Foundation (TFFF). Archived from the original on 2014-12-04. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  15. "University of the Arts London".
  16. "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation | Ellen Lesperance" . Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  17. "2017 Biennial Awards". The Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation. Archived from the original on 2019-03-11. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  18. "Ellen Lesperance". Robert Rauschenberg Foundation. Retrieved 2021-04-07.
  19. "Ellen Lesperance: The Subjects and W.I.T.C.H. 1985 (Aug 9, 2017 – Nov 5, 2017)". Portland Art Museum. Archived from the original on September 20, 2020. Retrieved 2019-12-09.
  20. "Velvet Fist: Ellen Lesperance". Good Trouble. 6 March 2020. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  21. "Fulbright Scholar Program" . Retrieved 2022-10-24.
  22. Afterimage: The Journal of Media Arts and Cultural Criticism, Vol. 44 No. 6, May/June 2017; (p. 33)
  23. https://hollybushgardens.co.uk/exhibitions/ellen-lesperance-stay-in-the-centre-of-no-mans-land-2024-more/.{{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  24. "Ellen Lesperance".
  25. "Ellen Lesperance: Amazonknights". Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami. Retrieved 2022-02-28.
  26. "Ellen Lesperance: Will There Be Womanly Times?". Hollybush Gardens. Retrieved 2021-11-17.
  27. Buhe, Elizabeth (2020-03-03). "Ellen Lesperance: Velvet Fist". The Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  28. "Dress Codes: Ellen Lesperance and Diane Simpson". Frye Art Museum. Archived from the original on 2020-11-05. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  29. "Less Is a Bore: Maximalist Art & Design". ICA Boston. Archived from the original on 2019-05-29. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  30. "MASP". MASP.
  31. "Claire Lehmann on Ellen Lesperance". Artforum.com. December 2018. Archived from the original on 2018-12-01. Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  32. Smith, Roberta; Heinrich, Will; Schwendener, Martha; Steinhauer, Jillian (2018-09-20). "What to See in New York Art Galleries This Week (Published 2018)". The New York Times. ISSN   0362-4331 . Retrieved 2020-11-01.
  33. "Still I Rise: Feminisms, Gender, Resistance, Act 1". Nottingham Contemporary.
  34. "EXHIBITION GUIDE Nashashibi/Skaer". Tate.
  35. Cotter, Holland (28 September 2017). "When it Comes to Gender, Let Confusion Reign". the New York Times. Retrieved 2021-04-06.
  36. Mizota, Sharon (27 June 2016). "Review: For Ellen Lesperance and Helen Mirra, the message is woven into the art". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2021-04-07.
  37. Stull Meyers, Ashley. "Ellen Lesperance: We Were Singing at Adams and Ollman". Daily Serving. Retrieved 2021-04-06.
  38. Rosenberg, Karen (16 October 2014). "Art in Review: Thread Lines". the New York Times. Retrieved 2021-04-06.
  39. "We Are Changers and Everything We Touch Can Change".
  40. "BALTIMORE MUSEUM OF ART ANNOUNCES FALL 2019 ACQUISITIONS". Baltimore Museum of Art Press. 31 December 2019.
  41. "Cardigan Worn by One Woman of the Boeing Five, Tried for Entering the Boeing Nuclear Missile Plant on September 27th, 1983, Sentenced to Fifteen Days in the King County Jail for Defending Life on Earth". Brooklyn Museum.
  42. "Somewhere Along the Black Sea in the Distant North-East, or in Libya in the Furthest South, The Amazons – The Woman and the Girl Children – Exist Just Outside of the Range of Normal Human Experience". Kadist.
  43. "Following $12 M. Pollock Sale, Everson Museum Acquires Contemporary Works by Shinique Smith, Ellen Lesperance, More". ARTnews. 7 January 2021.
  44. "Frac Grand Large".
  45. "Du jaroj da seksa perforto kontrau virinaj Egiptaj manifestaciantoj, kaj jam ni portas trancilojn en la stratoj. Ili volas nin resti en niaj hejmoj, sed ni ..os! Neniam! Bandoj da krimuloj de brutuloj strio ni nuda. Ili venkis, palp kaj seksperfort ni. Aj, Egiptio! Devas ne esti libereco sen la libera la virinaro!". Frye Art Museum.
  46. "Amazonknights. Womonspirit. Womonpower. Glory". Institute of Contemporary Art Miami.
  47. "Q of Hearts". Minneapolis Institute of Art.
  48. "Ellen Lesperance".
  49. "When all the warheads turn to rust, until our days are done, we'll hold our mother earth in trust, for children yet to come". Museum of Fine Arts Houston.,
  50. "Ludwig Museum". Ludwig Museum.
  51. "Cardigan Worn by Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp Activist as She Left Holloway Prison, Charged with Social Disruption for the Second Time in Two Months, Winter 1983". Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art. 6 December 2019.
  52. https://www.pamm.org/.{{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  53. "Ellen Lesperance: The Subjects and W.I.T.C.H. 1985". Portland Art Museum. Archived from the original on 2020-09-20. Retrieved 2019-09-08.
  54. https://beta.renniemuseum.org/.{{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  55. "The Path of Feminye". Rose Art Museum.
  56. "Who Killed Karen Silkwood?".
  57. "Lily of the Arc Lights". Whitney Museum of American Art.