Victoria Barrett Fuller | |
---|---|
Born | Allentown, Pennsylvania, U.S. | May 13, 1953
Nationality | American |
Education | University of Denver Regis University (BA) School of the Art Institute of Chicago (MFA) |
Known for | Sculptor, artist |
Website | victoriafullerart |
Victoria Barrett Fuller (born May 13, 1953) is an American artist, sculptor, natural science illustrator, and award-winning singer, songwriter, and musician.
Fuller was born in Allentown, Pennsylvania, and grew up on a farm and equestrian center in Catasauqua, Pennsylvania. She attended grade school at Moravian Preparatory School in Bethlehem, Pennsylvania, and graduated high school from Masters School in Dobbs Ferry, New York. She attended college at University of Denver, and then moved to Aspen, Colorado, where she received a BA degree through the UWW program at Regis University in Denver, Colorado [1] while continuing to live in Aspen.
Fuller met and married fellow-artist Jack Bowers in Aspen in 1977 and divorced in 1980. While living in Aspen, Fuller studied at Anderson Ranch Art Center, and in 1983 was a "resident painting program recipient" and through the years has participated in workshops with Jim Dine, Terry Allen, Red Grooms, Roger Brown, Robert Mangold, Sylvia Plimack Mangold, Lucas Johnson, James Surls, Alexis Rockman, and was an assistant to visiting artist Deborah Butterfield assembling a horse sculpture from scavenged wood in 1985. In the 1980s, Fuller also attended the Parsons Paris program in Paris. While working towards her undergraduate degree, Fuller attended the San Francisco Art Institute for two semesters in 1980. In 1984, Fuller moved to New York City and had a show of her work at Westbroadway Gallery, and was in subsequent shows at M-13 and White Columns. She rented an art studio space in the Tribeca neighborhood. During this time Fuller exchanged apartments for one year with auto racing legend Janet Guthrie, who lived in Fuller's apartment in Aspen, hile writing her autobiography, and Fuller lived in hers while pursuing her career in New York.
Fuller moved to Chicago in 1992 to study at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, in Chicago, Illinois, and received an MFA degree in 1994. Graduate advisors were artists Michiko Itatani, as well as Chicago Imagists Jim Nutt and Barbara Rossi.
Fuller works in a variety of media, including painting, sculpture, and installation art. Her work during the 1980s shows a tendency towards pop cartoon-like imagery on shaped canvas, later incorporating appropriated objects. Her work from 1990 to 2010 involves the usage of industrial fabricated materials and geometric forms while combining common everyday objects. The work recalls 1960's minimalism and borrows from the spirit of 1960's pop art and 20th century surrealism. Pop artists such as Claes Oldenburg are acknowledged influences. Fuller's work finds inspiration from natural and man-made forms, and is often concerned with finding the correlations between the two, while addressing issues of social concepts, popular culture, and perception. According to Lanny Silverman, Curator of Exhibitions Chicago Cultural Center Department of Cultural Affairs, "Fuller utilizes manufactured components that are part and parcel of the modern industrial age [...] and reveals a facet of our consumer culture. Fuller's strategy is to liberate these objects from their everyday functions by combining them in whacky configurations that tease us with some sense of use." [2] Amongst her body of work is the large-scale public sculpture, "Shoe of Shoes", in St. Louis, Missouri, a large high-heeled woman's shoe made from approximately 2,000 cast aluminum shoes, and her 35-foot tall Bronze sculpture, "Global Garden Shovel", in Seattle, Washington.
Fuller has received four solo shows, including exhibits at the Paint Creek Center for the Arts entitled “Extraordinary Ordinary” in Michigan in 1998 and at the Chicago Cultural Center, titled "The Emancipation of the Common Object" in 2001.
Fuller's work is included in group shows, including, in 2011, Recycled, Reclaimed, Repurposed in the Willis Tower lobby and The Department of Cultural Affairs presents CSI on the Boulevard. In 2010, Fuller's work was featured in exhibits such as Sculpture Invasion 2010 at Koehline Museum of art in Des Plaines, Illinois, and an outdoor sculpture show Countercurrents at Art Chicago in Merchandise Mart in Chicago. The same year, Fuller was commissioned to contribute to Comed's public display “Fine Art Fridges” in Chicago. The resulting work, Peas and Quiet, is now on exhibit at the Discovery Center Museum in Rockford, Illinois.
Other notable shows include “Species Affected by Global Warming” at the Peggy Notebaert Nature Museum in Chicago in 2009, a 3-person show with Robert H. Hudson and Gordon Powell at the Sears Tower in 2009, “Krasl Biennial Sculpture Invitational” at the Krasl Art Center in St. Joseph, Michigan, in 2006, “Formed to Function” at the John Michael Kohler Arts Center in Sheboygan, Wisconsin, in 2003, “Pierwalk” at Navy Pier in Chicago in 2002 and 1999, and exhibits at Rockford Art Museum and Evanston Art Center in 2000. That same year, the sculpture Shoe of Shoes was featured in “The Really Big Shoe Show” at the City Museum in St. Louis. Shoes has since been acquired by Brown Shoe Company in Clayton, Missouri, and is on public view outside the entrance to their corporate offices. [3]
Fuller's work has been acquired and commissioned by several institutions, including Sound Transit in Seattle, Allentown Art Museum in Allentown, Pennsylvania, Mind Inc. in Garrison, New York, Burrell Communications in Chicago, ESPN Zone in Chicago, and Bi-State Development Agency in St. Louis. [4]
In addition to being a contemporary visual artist, Fuller is also a singer songwriter. Victoria's sound is a hybrid of alternative rock, pop, jazz, and blues. In her debut CD, Small Moments, produced by Danny Shaffer, she is accompanied by such artists as Grammy winner Scott Bennett, who tours and records with Beach Boys legend Brian Wilson, and Jeff Jacobs, who has performed with Billy Joel and as a touring member of Foreigner. [5] In 2006, “Small Moments” was released in physical form, and digitally on iTunes. Fuller's band is called Victoria Fuller and The Brushmen. [6]
In 2008, Fuller received a nomination from The Independent Singer Songwriter Association for her song "Barcelona Nights" in the Jazz Category and an Honorable Mention from the Mid Atlantic Song Contest. She received Honorable Mention awards in the 2007 11th Annual Unisong Songwriting Contest, and in the 2006 Singer/Songwriter Awards. Also another Honorable Mention award was given by the 2005 Billboard (magazine) song contest. Her songs have been played on Richard Milne's 93.1 WXRT-FM Local Anesthetic show, the UIC radio “Hidden Treasures” show, hosted by DJ John Rose, Songwriter's Network, and on WGN Radio on Rick Kogan's “Sunday Papers” Show, WZRD (Northeastern Illinois University) radio, iTunes, CD baby, ReverbNation.com, and Rhapsody. [7]
In 1986, Fuller received the Creative Fellowship Award from the Colorado Council on the Arts and Humanities. In 2000, she received a Fellowship Award from the Illinois Arts Council, a “Best of 3D” award from a juried exhibition at the Rockford Art Museum, and a “Juror’s Award” from a Biennial Exhibition at the Evanston Art Center. More recently, Fuller has received the CAAP Grant from the Illinois Arts Council. [4]
Reviews and articles about her work have appeared in the Western Arts and Architecture, New York Daily News, Manhattan Arts, Cover Magazine, Chicago Tribune, Chicago Sun Times, New York Post, TWA's Ambassador Magazine, and on NBC, CBS, ABC stations in Chicago, and Fox news in St. Louis. [4]
Claire Zeisler was an American fiber artist who expanded the expressive qualities of knotted and braided threads, pioneering large-scale freestanding sculptures in this medium. Throughout her career Zeisler sought to create "large, strong, single images" with fiber.
Doris Emrick Lee was an American painter known for her figurative painting and printmaking. She won the Logan Medal of the Arts from the Chicago Art Institute in 1935. She is known as one of the most successful female artists of the Depression era in the United States.
Deborah Kay Butterfield is an American sculptor. Along with her artist-husband John Buck, she divides her time between a farm in Bozeman, Montana, and studio space in Hawaii. She is known for her sculptures of horses made from found objects, like metal, and especially pieces of wood.
Jane L. Calvin is an artist based in Chicago, Illinois.
Anne Wilson is a Chicago-based visual artist. Wilson creates sculpture, drawings, Internet projects, photography, performance, and DVD stop motion animations employing table linens, bed sheets, human hair, lace, thread and wire. Her work extends the traditional processes of fiber art to other media. Wilson is a professor in the Department of Fiber and Material Studies at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago.
Hollis Sigler was an American artist. She received several Arts Lifetime Achievement awards as both an artist and an educator, including the Distinguished Artist Award for Lifetime Achievement from the College Art Association in 2001.
Liz Larner is an American installation artist and sculptor living and working in Los Angeles.
Phyllis Bramson is an American artist, based in Chicago and known for "richly ornamental, excessive and decadent" paintings described as walking a tightrope between "edginess and eroticism." She combines eclectic influences, such as kitsch culture, Rococo art and Orientalism, in juxtapositions of fantastical figures, decorative patterns and objects, and pastoral landscapes that affirm the pleasures and follies of romantic desire, imagination and looking. Bramson shares tendencies with the Chicago Imagists and broader Chicago tradition of surreal representation in her use of expressionist figuration, vernacular culture, bright color, and sexual imagery. Curator Lynne Warren wrote of her 30-year retrospective at the Chicago Cultural Center, "Bramson passionately paints from her center, so uniquely shaped in her formative years […] her lovely colors, fluttery, vignette compositions, and flowery and cartoony imagery create works that are really like no one else's. Writer Miranda McClintic said that Bramson's works "incorporate the passionate complexity of eastern mythology, the sexual innuendos of soap operas and sometimes the happy endings of cartoons."
Kim Victoria Abeles is an American interdisciplinary artist and professor emeritus. She was born in Richmond Heights, Missouri, and currently lives in Los Angeles. She is described as an activist artist because of her work's social and political nature. In her work, she’s able to express these issues and shine a light on them to larger audiences. She’s able to show the significance of the issues by creating a piece that involves an object and adds the struggle attached to it, which represents what is happening in current events. She is also known for her feminist works. Abeles has exhibited her works in 22 countries and has received a number of significant awards including a Guggenheim Fellowship. Aside from her work as an artist, she was a professor in public art, sculpture, and drawing at California State University, Northridge from 1998 to 2009, after which she became professor emerita in 2010.
Michiko Itatani is an American artist, based in Chicago, who was born in Osaka, Japan. After she received her BFA (1974) and MFA (1976) at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1974 and 1976 respectively, she returned to her alma mater in 1979 to teach in the Painting and Drawing department. Through her work, Itatani explores identity, continuation, and finding one's way in the modern world. Her work depicts nude figures in an expressionist style. Itatani has received the Illinois Arts Council Artist's Fellowship, the National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship and the John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship. Her work is collected in many museums, including the Art Institute of Chicago; the Museum of Contemporary Art, Olympic Museum, Switzerland; Villa Haiss Museum, Germany; Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec, Canada; Museu D'art Contemporani (MACBA), Spain; and the National Museum of Contemporary Art, South Korea.
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.
Jill Sebastian is an American educational innovator, integrated public artist and multi-media artist.
Andrene Kauffman was an American painter and educator who created a mural for the post office mural project in Ida Grove, Iowa. She completed twenty-five murals and seven sculptures throughout Chicago, as part of the art projects for the New Deal's Section of Painting and Sculpture. Later, she completed seventeen ceramic murals for the 3rd Unitarian Church, which was designated as a Chicago Landmark in 1960. In addition to her artwork and exhibitions, Kauffman taught art for forty-one years at various universities in Chicago, Rockford, Illinois, and Valparaiso, Indiana.
Margaret Wharton (1943-2014) was an American artist, known for her sculptures of deconstructed chairs. She deconstructed, reconstructed and reimagined everyday objects to make works of art that could be whimsical, witty or simply thought-provoking in reflecting her vision of the world.
Marjorie Schick was an innovative American jewelry artist and academic who taught art for 50 years. Approaching sculptural creations, her avant-garde pieces have been widely collected. Her works form part of the permanent collections of many of the world's leading art museums, including the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg, Russia; the Museum of Arts and Design in New York City; the National Museum of Modern Art in Kyoto, Japan; the Philadelphia Museum of Art in Pennsylvania; and the Victoria and Albert Museum of London.
Diane Simpson is an artist who lives and works in Wilmette, Illinois.
Joan Livingstone is an American contemporary artist, educator, curator, and author based in Chicago. She creates sculptural objects, installations, prints, and collages that reference the human body and bodily experience.
Alice Shaddle Baum was an American sculptor, collage artist, and founding member of the Artemisia Gallery in Chicago.
Claire Lieberman is an American artist known especially for her sculpture and installations, which explore the relationship between play and violence in contemporary culture. Her expansive body of work also includes prints, photographs, and a series of glass sculptures of toy guns. Her multidisciplinary art explores the relationship of toys and games to conflict in contemporary culture.
Buzz Spector is an American artist and critic. Born in Chicago in 1948, he received his Bachelor of Fine Arts (BFA) from Southern Illinois University at Carbondale in 1972. He received his Master of Fine Arts (MFA) from the University of Chicago in 1978. Spector taught at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Cornell University, and Washington University in St. Louis's Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Arts, where he is Emeritus Professor.