King Exhibition, Group 1
Sophie Aldinger
Bryon Lee Allison
Roman Anaya
Nelika Anderson
Jasmine Baetz
Samantha Bares
Joelle Cicak
Gengwei Guo
Amy Hoagland
Emily Irvin
Robert Martin
Sophie Aldinger
Consume
Video Installation
2020
This video contains nudity, viewer discretion is advised
Artist statement: I use the societally loaded images of pill bottles, the female form, and religious symbols to investigate how growing up lower class, identifying as queer in a Christian community, and being diagnosed with mental illness all planted a sense of ¡°other¡± into me. Coming of age I felt like I had no control over the labels forced unto me, which urged me to root my individual identity in subcultures like Post-grunge, Emo, and Generation Z¡¯s internet culture. Now, I¡¯ve now started realizing the Western privilege behind this fixation with individualism in the face of a world full of starvation, inequality, and climate crisis. My current work confronts my personal embodiment of issues like violence, drug dependency, masturbatory nostalgia, and aestheticization of mental illness that characterize this subculture I identify with.
Project Statement: Inspired by the illustrative posters of Alphonse Mucha, I used yarn as a principle medium for this piece. It is through the use of yarn that I was able to create the natural flowing lines which played such a key role in helping to define the style of Mucha. I then used varying tensions and colors to create an abstract form that contrasted intentional and natural. By placing this abstraction to the foreground, I rely on the viewer to fill in the blanks and to read the form either as a depicted figure, a symbol, or a material presence
Project statement: Roman Catholic imagery often portrays Jesus in tears to remind us of the sacrifices He made. When I portray my subjects in tears, it is meant to serve a similar purpose. There are many individuals in the queer community who are dying (being killed) for a cause. The transgender community, more specifically transgender women of color, are most affected. The stained glass in the background contains arches in reference to the conquest and colonialism from when Catholicism was originally brought and forced upon the American people by the Spanish. The bars holding the stained glass together, bear aesthetic similarities to a cage.
Project statement: This piece is an exploration of the relationship between my sister, Isabel, and myself. There is a ten year age gap between us, and although our differences are prominent, I find myself getting caught up in all the similarities we share. These similarities range from physical, features that others can see in both of us from the outside; to mental and emotional aspects that are within us which only she and I experience. She began high school not long after this piece was created, and I find myself wondering if certain experiences I had will be similar or different for my sister.
Project statement: We understand sentiment as a feeling ¨C exaggerated and self-indulgent by nature ¨C of tenderness, sadness, and nostalgia. It¡¯s a complex emotion, straddling the inexpressible space between joy and sorrow. We¡¯re afraid of being sentimental, but there¡¯s an irrefutable authenticity to these emotions related to personal histories. I am indulgent in sentimentality. The Family Portrait series documents intergenerational (and often non-archival) objects. I avoid the term heirloom; it¡¯s a fiddly idea in a low-income family. Predominately, ideas and sentiments are the gifts I carry with me. In this triptych, I¡¯ve chosen to depict three views of Golden¡¯s Birds of North America field guide, gifted to my mother on Christmas in 1990 by my grandparents. Each view is a portrait, capturing the mark or ware of three separate generations, an instilled value for knowledge, and an appreciation for birds throughout this lineage.
Project statement: This sculpture explored the memories I have of watching mother deer teach their babies to run and grow strong in the Spring--sheltering them in our backyard woodpile as a safe an nourishing space--and the way that this contrasts the Autumn--when notions of yard work dispose of dead leaves and twigs, and when hunters slice the lower legs from deer they kill (a part seen as having no value, as it has little meat). Deer serve an important role to state economies during hunting season. They also are disastrous to the environment, as their ability to adapt well to urban and suburban areas pairs well with the absence of natural predators. People love deer, find them beautiful, gentle, and graceful, but people also love to obtain them, hunt them, and keep their bodies as trophies. This relationship is not a duality, and many people feel all of these things when approaching the subject of deer. This sculpture was my attempt at ruminating over these complicated and seemingly conflicting ideas. Crafting each stick and leaf by hand assisted in this meditation. I used ashes from a deer killed by a hunter, placing them at the top of an altar-like pedestal, which references ideas of sacred sacrifices.
Project statement: Chinese classical literature has a significant influence on my painting creation. Whenever I read Chinese classical poetry and novels, the storyline and characters in the book are deeply rooted in my mind. Through imagination, I created my familiar characters and storylines through Chinese brushes and painted them into the Chinese folding fan.
Project statement: Synthetic Geode III was created from a 3D scan of a geode found in nature. The form was modified and recreated with water jet cut glass.