Eve Fowler

Eve Fowler (born 1964) is an American Artist based in Los Angeles.

Eve Fowler
Born1964 (age 5556)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materTemple University,
Yale University
Known forPhotography
AwardsCalifornia Community Foundation Award

Fowler was born in Philadelphia, PA and has been living and working in Los Angeles since 2002.[1] Fowler's most notable work includes her series of texts appropriating Gertrude Stein's poetry, and her portraits of male hustlers in New York and Los Angeles in the 90s.[2][3] Identifying as a lesbian and feminist, Fowler's work tries to identify what she perceives as male biases in language and culture and reframe them around sex-positive, feminist, and queered images.[4] For example, her 2005 portrait of performance artist K8 Hardy recalls Austrian feminist, VALERIE EXPORT's 1969 work Action Pants: Genital Panic by depicting Hardy in her studio, sitting wide legged with the crotch cut out of her jeans.[5]

Biography

Fowler received her BA in Journalism from Temple University in 1986, and her MFA in photography from Yale University in 1992.[6] Her work has been included in group exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, Hammer Museum, Yerba Buena Center, and San Francisco Museum of Art.[7]

Following her education, Fowler spent four years portraying" gay male hustlers" working the streets in New York and Los Angeles, for which she first gained recognition in the art world.[7][8]

Work

"Shared Women" February - April 2007

A group exhibition hosted by the Los Angeles Contemporary Exhibitions (LACE),[9] featuring Fowler's filmworks alongside with the works of feminist artists A.L. Steiner and Emily Roysdon. Emphasis was placed on themes such as cronyism, feminism, nepotism, elements of reaffirmation that depended on the reorganization of history from portraying ‘the women’ and ‘the gays,’ as outsiders to now insiders.

"Wimmin by Womyn who love Wymin" January - March 2006

A two-person exhibition at the Harry Levine Gallery in Culver City, California, "Wimmin by Womyn who love Wymin" featured the works of A.L. Steiner and Fowler. Both artists worked on a photo projected involving taking different pictures of the same women, juxtaposing themes depicting calm sexual subjects from rough, unmounted, and funny "snapshot porntraitrure".[10]

"These Sounds Fall Into My Mind" September - October 2019

This exhibition at the Morán Morán includes a film entitled with it which it as it if it is to be, Part II, a video that shares the same name as the exhibition, and six wall pieces. This exhibition focuses on the feminist perspective on text, language and art. Fowler's film is 33 minutes long and has documented 20 female artists in the later stages of he career reading Gertrude Stein’s Many Many Women. The wall pieces are stills taken from the video and were made with car paint and aluminum.[11]

Awards

In 2007, Fowler received the California Community Foundation Award for her photographic work that compassed the variety of aesthetic approaches, disciplines, and reflected the eclectic character of the Los Angeles contemporary art scene.[13]

Fowler is also a recipient of the 2017 Art Matters grant, and was a 2019 fellow with Harvard's Radcliffe Institute.[14][15]

gollark: Reducing moving parts is good I guess.
gollark: Maybe seed engineered viruses in the grass periodically to stop it growing.
gollark: I still feel like setting the grass on fire would be easier. I don't think lasers provide much of an advantage here if you want to actually cut it.
gollark: Evidently we need software to automatically replace potentially identifying information you reveal with randomized information instead.
gollark: Is it actually possible to make enough plutonium from the entire solar system's heavy metal stocks to noticeably affect its spectral lines?

References

  1. "Meet LA's Art Community: Eve Fowler Says, "I Learn More When I See Art With Friends"". Hyperallergic. 2020-01-29. Retrieved 2020-06-04.
  2. Dazed. "Hustling on the streets of New York and LA". Dazed.
  3. Mizota, Sharon (27 May 2015). "Eve Fowler imagines Gertrude Stein's words as a visual cacophony". LA Times. Retrieved 6 March 2016.
  4. "Eve Fowler Appropriates Gertrude Stein at MIER Gallery". Artsy. 12 June 2015.
  5. Lord, Catherine; Meyer, Richard (2019). Art & queer culture. ISBN 978-0-7148-7834-8. OCLC 1090678799.
  6. "Eve Fowler Biography – Eve Fowler on artnet".
  7. "Artist Eve Fowler Is a Los Angeles Legend". Cultured Magazine. 2016-10-07. Retrieved 2020-04-03.
  8. "any one she is kissing, Eve Fowler | Artspace.com". Artspace. Retrieved 2020-04-03.
  9. "Shared Women".
  10. Segade, Alex (2006). "Eve Fowler & A.L. Steiner". Artus (13): 4.
  11. "These Sounds Fall Into My Mind". Morán Morán. Retrieved 2020-06-04.
  12. "Printed Matter Announces Its Awards for Artists". www.artforum.com. Retrieved 2020-04-03.
  13. Muchnic, Suzanne (15 June 2007). "15 local visual artists will be named fellows; To boost L.A.'s art scene, the California Community Foundation will award $275,000 to a diverse group today" (HOME EDITION). LA Times. ProQuest 422215719.
  14. "POSTPONED: Screening: with it which it as it if it is to be, Part II by Artist Eve Fowler". www.newmuseum.org. Retrieved 2020-04-03.
  15. "Eve Fowler". Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University. 2018-04-05. Retrieved 2020-04-03.
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