Erika Wanenmacher

Erika Wanenmacher (born 1955) is a sculptor and installation artist from Santa Fe, New Mexico, a self-described "maker of things." She has said, "I believe objects that are made with intent carry resonance that can shift energy, power, and beliefs. They're about magic and changing consciousness."[1][2] Wanenmacher's work has been shown nationally and internationally. Her sculptures incorporate many materials and techniques including forged steel, carved and painted wood, cast aluminum, and large-scale installations. She is represented in Los Angeles, CA by Blythe Projects.[3]

Erika Wanenmacher
Born1955
NationalityGerman-American
Education1973-76 Kansas City Art Institute. 1976-77 Feminist Studio Workshop, Los Angeles, CA
Known formixed media, sculpture, installation
AwardsKindle Project Award
Websitehttp://www.erikawanenmacher.com/

Artwork

The major themes in Wanenmacher's handmade sculptures and installation include the conflicts between nature and culture; U.S. atomic history, and magic and witchcraft.[4] The art critic Michael Abatemarco has written that Wanenmacher's work reveals the medicinal and metaphysical properties of plants and the relationship between the botanical realm and human beings and other animals.[5] Several of her works have addressed the legacy of atomic weapons, including the human radiation experiments during the Cold War.[6] Her installation, "The Science Club, The Boy's Room, Now, Forever, Then, Part 1", examines the relationship between U.S. atomic history and culture, to critique the progress of science, and the adverse effects of the pursuits of nuclear physics. She has used surplus objects from Los Alamos National Laboratory, obtained through Ed Grothus' The Black Hole surplus company.

Notable exhibits

Selected solo exhibitions

  • Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art, Boulder, CO. "The Science Club: The Boy's Room, Now, Forever, Then, Part 1. 2008
  • Linda Durham Gallery, Santa Fe, NM. "Where have you been (come to your senses)" 2010. "Ditch Witch" 2009. "I Stole Stealth (Coyote Taught Me) 2007.
  • SITE Santa Fe, Santa Fe, NM. "Grimoire" 2001.
  • Center for Contemporary Arts, Santa Fe, NM. "Coniunctio: A Twenty-Year Survey". 1996.

Selected group exhibitions

  • Contemporary Museum Saint Louis, Saint Louis, MO. "Cryptic: The Use of Allegory in Contemporary Art with a Master Class from Goya". 2011
  • Albright-Knox Museum of Art, Buffalo, NY. "Surveyor" 2011
  • New Mexico Museum of Art, Santa Fe, NM. "Case Studies From the Bureau of Contemporary Art" 2011
  • Tweed Museum, Duluth, MN' "Botanica: Contemporary Artists and the World of Plants" (traveling exhibition) 1999-2001

Notable collections

  • Albright-Knox Museum of Art, Buffalo, NY.
  • Fisher Landau Center, Long Island City, NY.
  • New Mexico Museum of Art,[7] Santa Fe, NM.
gollark: Tabs *are* the best way.
gollark: Wrong.
gollark: No allegations of our alleged "time crimes" have allegedly been backed up by substantial evidence.
gollark: (on 6000 384-entry vectors, so actually this isn't very impressive)
gollark: I have a very fast but somewhat RAM-hungry implementation, and one which uses SQLite and makes it a (very badly optimized) user-defined function, and somehow the SQLite one takes less than a second to do anything.

References

  1. "Erika Wanenmacher." Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine Linda Durham Contemporary Art. Accessed 11 April 2011.
  2. "Makers Muse: Erika Wanenmacher". kindleproject.org. Kindle Project. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  3. Metz, Hillary. "Blythe Projects: Going NO+MAD". installationmag.com. Installation Magazine. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  4. Albright-Knox Art Gallery. "Erika Wanenmacher: Of the Beasts". Albright-Knox Art Gallery. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  5. Abatemarco, Michael (November 7, 2014). "The village witch: Artist Erika Wanenmacher's web of interconnections". The Santa Fe New Mexican. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  6. "Boulder Museum of Contemporary Art Announces Fall Exhibitions". artdaily.com. Art Daily. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  7. "Works of : Erika Wanenmacher". Searchable Art Museum. New Mexico Museum of Art. Retrieved 8 December 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.