Katerina Lanfranco | |
---|---|
Born | Katerina Lanfranco May 8, 1978 Hamilton, Ontario, Canada |
Nationality | Canadian, American |
Known for | Painting, Sculpture, Installation Art |
Katerina Lanfranco (born May 8, 1978) is a New York City-based visual artist making paintings, drawings, sculptures, and mixed media installations. She was born in Hamilton, Ontario. She studied art at the University of California, Santa Cruz where she received her B.A in Visual Art and in "Visual Theory and Museum Studies". She also attended the Sierra Institute studying Nature Philosophies and Religions while camping in the California wilderness. She received her M.F.A from Hunter College, City University of New York in Studio Art, with an emphasis in painting. In 2004, she studied at the Universitat der Kunst (UdK) in Berlin, Germany on an exchange scholarship. During this time, she also received a travel grant to study Baroque and High Baroque painting in Italy.
Lanfranco explores the concepts of nature, science, and fantasy. Her artwork references cultural modes of representing nature to engage in a dialogue between nature and culture, through the medium of visual art. Her work has been compared to Henri Rousseau's subjective and fantastical landscape imagery. Influences include: Albrecht Dürer, Hieronymus Bosch, Baroque Art, Hubble Space Telescope photos, Charles Burchfield, Hudson River School painters, American Museum of Natural History dioramas, Joseph Cornell, Blaschka Glass Flowers, ikebana, katagami, ukiyo prints. "When looking at her artwork, you might not see the subtle relationship between post-Impressionism and expressionism. However, once you start carefully examining it you will discover that Katerina Lanfranco actually uses post-Impressionism as a way to produce a meaningful piece of expressionist type". [1] The New York Times writes: "Katerina Lanfranco’s 'Tomorrow Dreams of Neon' envisions a luminous, post-apocalyptic Eden". [2]
"The results are unlike anything else you'll find in Chelsea just now, and they're beautifully installed in Nancy Hoffman's new space." ARTinfo 1/2009
"Lanfranco's particular vision is compelling..." ARTnews 3/2009
"Ursus Horribilis...recalled works of Henri Rousseau in its use of symbolism and in its boundless imaginativeness." ARTnews 12/06
An image of Ursus Horribilis appeared in the masthead of Time Out New York in March, 2007.
Lanfranco's work is represented by the Nancy Hoffman Gallery, originally located in SoHo and now in the Chelsea Art District, in NYC. Her work is in the permanent collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the Kupferstichkabinett (Museum of Prints and Drawings) in Berlin, Germany, and the Corning Museum of Glass. Lanfranco's work has been shown nationally and internationally. She has had solo exhibitions in California, New York, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, Kyoto, Japan, and Berlin, Germany. Lanfranco is the Founder and Director of Rhombus Space, a contemporary art gallery in the Red Hook neighborhood of Brooklyn, NY. Since its inauguration in September 2013, Rhombus Space has invited artists with exceptional talent and commitment to exhibit their work in the context of their peers. Rhombus Space exhibitions feature curatorial themes that bring together diverse artwork by innovative contemporary artists. Rhombus Space also presents solo exhibitions and art events. From 2015 to 2018, Katerina Lanfranco was the Chief Curator of Trestle Gallery at the Brooklyn Art Space.
Vermont Studio Center, Art Battle Winner, Japan-United States Creative Exchange Fellowship Artist in Residence. Japan/US Friendship Commission and the National Endowment for the Arts. Pollock Krasner Fellow. Byrdcliffe Artist Residency. EFA Studio Artist is Residence in collaboration with Flux Factory. Tony Smith Award. Hunter College Exchange Scholarship. William Graft Memorial Fund Travel Grant Award. Eduardo Carrillo Painting Scholarship. Susan Benteen and William Hyde Irwin Art Scholarship.
At the Pratt Institute Manhattan Center A large-scale exhibition of paintings, cutouts, and sculptures.
A large-scale exhibition of paintings, cutouts, and sculptures.
Immersive site-specific installation that centers itself around an octagonal floor mandala and sculpture situated at the center of the square gallery.
Survey of recent work, and large-scale yarn wall drawing.
Paintings and mixed media works made with wood from Grunewald (forest), Berlin.
Mixed media sculptures of fantastical flowers with conjured Latin names, and otherworldly landscapes - using flameworked glass, plaster, paper clay, paint, and sewn elements – presented in shadow box frames.
Site-specific installation of hand-cut black Tyvek depicting native North American and Japanese trees to create a hybrid forest with embedded cultural symbols. Created for the Mary Porter Sesnon Gallery.
Combining the deep reaches of outer space with the deep sea to create an imagined liminal space of known geography. Conceptually a fertile ground for invented flora and fauna that might inhabit this dark, cold and distant landscape.
Ursus Horribilis is the unfortunate Latin name for Grizzly Bear – an iconic symbol of American wilderness. This diorama made in the traditional museum of natural history style (AMNH) creates a fictitious scene complete with habitat and food sources for this fabricated hybrid bear. The large oil paintings on either side of the bear are artistic depictions of Biblical Creation and Evolutionary Theory.
She teaches at the Museum of Modern Art, [3] Hunter College, Parsons, the New School for Design, Fordham University, and Pratt Institute. Lanfranco has taught studio art at LIM College, Rutgers University, Brooklyn Botanic Garden, Brooklyn Art Space, and American Museum of Folk Art.
Cover art and book illustrations for "Wrapped in Red" by Alana I. Capria. October 31, 2014. [4] New York Alumni Artist Returns to Mentor Students. UCSC News. February 28, 2012. [5] Paper Cutout World at Sesnon Gallery. Santa Cruz Weekly, February 14, 2012. [6] Natural Selection, in ARTSEEN, Goodtimes Santa Cruz, January 2012. Seeing the Forest for the Trees. City on a Hill Press, January 31, 2012. [7] Brooklyn Artist Katerina Lanfranco Speaks About Her Panoramic Expressions. Tennessee Journalist, February 18, 2011. [8] Brush with Greatness. Toronto Star, October 11, 2010, p. E1-2. [9] Brush with Art. NOW Magazine, October 14, 2010, p. 12. Katerina Lanfranco, solo show review in ARTnews. March 2009, p. 112-3. [10] New York Gallery Shows to Start 2009, solo exhibition review, ARTinfo, 1/14/09. Ursus Horribilis, solo show reviewed in ARTnews. December 2006, p. 156. [11] Nature and Culture Intersect, reviewed in The Villager, 10/11/01, p. 36. Re-Seen, solo show reviewed in Metro Santa Cruz, 5/9/01, p. 35. Biting Birds and Bees, solo show reviewed in Metro Santa Cruz, 1/31/01, p. 29. Biting Birds and Bees, solo show reviewed, Good Times Santa Cruz, 2/1/01, p. 23 Dis-placements and Anxious Objects, Good Times Santa Cruz, 2/22/01, p. 25.
The Luhring Augustine Gallery is an art gallery in New York City. The gallery has three locations: Chelsea, Bushwick, and Tribeca. Its principal focus is the representation of an international group of contemporary artists whose diverse practices include painting, drawing, sculpture, video and photography.
Teresita Fernández is a New York-based visual artist best known for her public sculptures and unconventional use of materials. Her work is characterized by a reconsideration of landscape and issues of visibility. Fernández’s practice generates psychological topographies that prompt the subjective reshaping of spatial and historical awareness. Her experiential, large-scale works are often inspired by natural landscapes, investigating the historical, geological, and anthropological realms in flux. Her sculptures present optical illusions and evoke natural phenomena, land formations, and water.
Mel Kendrick is an American visual artist and sculptor known primarily for his abstract, three-dimensional forms derived from sliced and reconstituted wooden blocks. Kendrick's work is understood to reflect a deep fascination with process, space, geometry, and natural forms and materials.
Stephen Westfall is an American painter, critic, and professor at Rutgers University and Bard College.
Nancy Grossman is an American artist. Grossman is best known for her wood and leather sculptures of heads.
Peter Plagens is an American artist, art critic, and novelist based in New York City. He is most widely known for his longstanding contributions to Artforum and Newsweek, and for what critics have called a remarkably consistent, five-decade-long body of abstract formalist painting. Plagens has written three books on art, Bruce Nauman: The True Artist (2014), Moonlight Blues: An Artist's Art Criticism (1986) and Sunshine Muse: Modern Art on the West Coast, 1945-70 (1974), and two novels, The Art Critic (2008) and Time for Robo (1999). He has been awarded major fellowships for both his painting and his writing. Plagens's work has been featured in surveys at the Museum of Modern Art, Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Whitney Museum, and PS1, and in solo exhibitions at the Hirshhorn Museum and Las Vegas Art Museum. In 2004, the USC Fisher Gallery organized and held a 30-year traveling retrospective of his work. Critics have contrasted the purely visual dialogue his art creates—often generating more questions than answers—with the directness of his writing; they also contend that the visibility of his bylines as a critic has sometimes overshadowed his artmaking—unduly. Los Angeles Times critic David Pagel described Plagens's painting as a "fusion of high-flying refinement and everyday awkwardness" with an intellectual savvy, disdain for snobbery and ungainliness he likened to Willem de Kooning's work. Reviewing Plagens's 2018 exhibition, New York Times critic Roberta Smith called the show an "eye-teasing sandwich of contrasting formalist strategies," the hard-won result of a decade of focused experimentation.
Valerie Hegarty is an American painter, sculptor, and installation artist. She is known for irreverent, often critical works that replicate canonical paintings, furnishings, and architectural spaces from American or personal history undergoing various processes of transformation. Hegarty most often portrays her recreations in meticulously realized, trompe l’oeil states of decay, ruin, or physical attack related to their circumstances. Her work examines American historical themes involving colonization, slavery, Manifest Destiny, nationalism, art-historical movements and their ideological tenets, romantic conceptions of nature, and environmental degradation. Sculpture critic Robin Reisenfeld wrote that among other things, Hegarty's art is "informed by 19th-century American landscape painting as an expression of the sublime, as well as by the manufacturing of two-dimensional 'masterworks' to be destroyed in three-dimensional fashion in order to evoke entropic forces of growth and decay."
Julia Kunin is an American sculpture and video artist. She was born in Vermont, and lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. Her work is inspired by organic forms, undersea creatures, and interior spaces, with a focus on the female body. Her work has included ceramic art with luster glazes. She graduated from Rutgers University (M.F.A.) in 1993 and Wellesley College (B.A.) in 1984, and attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. Her work has been featured in ARTnews, House and Garden, The Brooklyn Rail, and in Harmony Hammond's book Lesbian Art in America.
Vivian E. Browne was an American artist. Born in Laurel, Florida, Browne was mostly known for her painting series called Little Men and her Africa series. She is also known for linking abstraction to nature in her tree paintings and in a series of abstract works made with layers of silk that were influenced by her travels to China. She was an activist, professor, and has received multiple awards for her work. According to her mother, Browne died at age 64 from bladder cancer.
JoAnne Carson is an American artist who is known for over-the-top, hybrid works in painting, sculpture and assemblage that freely mix fantasy, illusion and narrative, high and low cultural allusions, and seriocomic intent. She first gained widespread attention in the 1980s for what ARTnews critic Dan Cameron described as "extraordinary painted constructions—kaleidoscopic assemblages chock full of trompe-l’oeil painting, art-history quips, found objects and nostalgic echoes of early modernism." New York Times critic Roberta Smith wrote that Carson's subsequent work progressed methodically into three dimensions, culminating in freestanding botanical sculpture that exuded "giddy beauty" and "unapologetic decorativeness"; her later imaginary landscapes have been described as whimsical spectacles of "Disneyesque horror." Carson has been recognized with a Guggenheim Fellowship, awards from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, American Academy in Rome and National Endowment for the Arts, and Yaddo artist residencies. Her work has been exhibited at institutions including the Whitney Museum of American Art, Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago (MCA), Albright-Knox Gallery, New Orleans Museum of Art, and Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia; it belongs to the public art collections of the Brooklyn Museum of Art, MCA Chicago, Frederick R. Weisman Art Foundation, and Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth, among others.
Leslie Wayne is a visual artist who lives and works in New York. Wayne is best known for her "highly dimensional paintings".
Torkwase Dyson is an interdisciplinary artist based in Beacon, New York, United States. Dyson describes the themes of her work as "architecture, infrastructure, environmental justice, and abstract drawing." Her work is informed by her own theory of Black Compositional Thought. This working term considers how spatial networks—paths, throughways, water, architecture, and geographies—are composed by Black bodies as a means of exploring potential networks for Black liberation. She is represented by Pace Gallery and Richard Gray Gallery.
Maia Cruz Palileo is an interdisciplinary artist based in Brooklyn, New York. Their work consists of paintings, drawings and sculptures, and explores their Filipino, American heritagethrough the examination of memory, family photographs, and oral histories.
Caitlin Cherry is an African-American painter, sculptor, and educator.
Louise Belcourt is a Canadian-American artist based in New York, known for elusive, largely abstract paintings that blend modernist formal play, a commitment to the physical world, and a visual language that shifts between landscape and the body, architecture and geometric form. New York Times critic Ken Johnson writes of her earlier work, "balancing adroitly between Color Field abstraction and Pop-style representation, Ms. Belcourt's paintings invite meditation on the perceptual, the conceptual and how our minds construct the world." Describing her later evolution, David Brody writes in Artcritical, "Hard-nosed Canadian empiricism and Brooklyn grit seem to combine in Belcourt’s work to undermine stylistic stasis."
Elke Solomon was an American artist, curator, educator and community worker. She was known for her interdisciplinary practice that combines painting, drawing, object-making, performance and installation. Solomon exhibited widely in the United States and abroad.
Nyeema Morgan is an American interdisciplinary and conceptual artist. Working in drawing, sculpture and print media, her works focus on how meaning is constructed and communicated given complex socio-political systems. Born in Philadelphia, she earned her BFA from the Cooper Union School of Art and her MFA from the California College of the Arts. She has held artist residencies at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture and Smack Mellon. Morgan's works are in the permanent collections of the Bowdoin College Museum of Art and the Menil Collection.
Nancy Genn is an American artist living and working in Berkeley, California known for works in a variety of media, including paintings, bronze sculpture, printmaking, and handmade paper rooted in the Japanese washi paper making tradition. Her work explores geometric abstraction, non-objective form, and calligraphic mark making, and features light, landscape, water, and architecture motifs. She is influenced by her extensive travels, and Asian craft, aesthetics and spiritual traditions.
Rico Gatson is a multidisciplinary artist working in Brooklyn, New York, whose work draws from his African-American background. Through his art, he provides social commentary on significant moments in African-American history. His work combines abstract patterns with vibrant colors, which creates confrontational work that references African American culture and history.
Heide Fasnacht is a New York City-based artist who works in sculpture, drawing, painting and installation art. Her work explores states of flux, instability and transformation caused by human action and natural events. Since the mid-1990s, she has been known for sculptures and drawings that recreate momentary phenomena such as sneezes, geysers and demolitions—in sometimes abstract or cartoony form—that are temporally and spatially "frozen" for consideration of their aesthetic, perceptual, social or sensate qualities. In the late 2010s, she has expanded these themes in paintings that examine lost and neglected childhood sites, such as playgrounds and amusement parks. ARTnews critic Ken Shulman has described her work as "chart[ing] the fluid dialogue between second and third dimensions, motion and inertia, creation and ruin."