Kim Hoeckele

Kim Hoeckele is a multimedia artist living in New York, New York whose mediums include performance art, photography, found objects and video art.

Kim Hoeckele
Education
Known forMultimedia, Photography
WebsiteKim Hoeckele

Early life and education

Kim Hoeckele received her B.F.A. in Photography from Georgia State University and received her M.F.A. in studio art from Hunter College in New York, in 2012.[1]

Themes

Hoeckele's work draws from appropriated images and found objects to construct work that quotes from and reconfigures male-dominant viewpoints carried through literary, art historical, and philosophical works of the Western Canon.[2] Her performance work Rosy-Crimson stemmed from a close reading of the Ancient Greek epic poem The Odyssey. In Rosy-Crimson she appropriates recurring text that omits Odysseus, and rearranges it into a script experimentally performed by actors.[3] In epoch, stage, shell, Hoeckele photographs her body as author and subject to perform sculptural poses for the camera, which are modeled from Greco-Roman ethnographic, art historical, and commercial images.[4]

Selected exhibitions[5]

2020 (forthcoming) epoch, stage, shell, CONTACT Photography Festival, Toronto, CA

2019 NADA Miami with Artfare

2019 Crease, Underdonk, Brooklyn, NY

2019 At the Edge of the Universe, 2019 Pingyao Festival of Photography, Pingyao, CN

2019 Digital Déjà Vu, Spectral Lines, Queens, NY

2018 2018 Queens International: Volumes, Queens Museum, Queens NY

2017 Rosy-Crimson, Hercules Art, New York, NY

2016  Rosy-Crimson, Nurture Art, Brooklyn, NY

2014 DIVIDE, Pelham Arts Center, Pelham, NY

2013 For and About, Brooklyn Arts Council, Brooklyn, NY

2013 Amnesic, Family Business, New York, NY

2012 Shifting States, Hockney Gallery, London, UK

2011 Heat Island, SmackMellon Gallery, Brooklyn, NY

2009 MOCA GA Collects: The Photographic Image, MOCA, Atlanta, GA

2007 Kim Hoeckele, Quirk Gallery, Richmond, VA

2004 So Atlanta, Atlanta Contemporary, Atlanta, GA

2003 Joy Cox and Kim Hoeckele, Saltworks Gallery, Atlanta, GA

Awards and Residencies

2019 AIM Program, Bronx Museum of the Arts, Bronx, NY

2018 Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Residency, New York, NY

2018 Lighthouse Works Fellowship, Fishers Island, NY

2017 Constance Saltonstall Foundation for the Arts Fellowship Residency, Ithaca, NY

Public collections

Her work is in the permanent collection of the Museum of Contemporary Art of Georgia.

Publications and Interviews[6]

2020 PHROOM Artist Feature, 2020, Web.

2019 “Interview with Kim Hoeckele,” interviewed by conch.fyi,

2019 Schmidt, Kyra, “Artist Feature: Kim Hoeckele,” Aint-Bad,

2019 “Tea Salon with Lily Benson and Kim Hoeckele,” interviewed by Elizabeth Smolarz

2018 Moody, Thomas, “Queens International Continues To Grow,” The Queens Tribune, November 15, 2018. Illus. Print.

2015 a new nothing (in collaboration with Jon-Phillip Sheridan)

2012 Camerona, Sadaf Rassoul and JOFF, “Water,” Capricious Volume II, Issue 13, 2012, 116-118. illus. Print.

2012 Paige, Dominica, “The Unvanquished & the Unknown”, Conveyor Magazine, 2012, 54-57. illus. Print.

2011 Hegart, Natalie, “Dog Days,” ArtSlant. N.P., July 3. 2011. Web.

2007 Young, Julie. “Art Under Glass,” Richmond Times-Dispatch, June 30, 2001. Print.

2004 Oppenheim, Phil, “Atlanta, Georgia,” Art Papers, September/ October, 40. Print.

2004 Cullum, Jerry, “Home is Where the Art Is,” Atlanta Journal Constitution, April 18. 2004, M3. Print.

2004 Fox, Catherine, “Focus on Photography,” Atlanta Journal Constitution, January 25, 2004, M3, Illus. Print.

gollark: Apiaristic purposes (category 1982UFH).
gollark: Randomly cease to exist and appear 1021486124 nanoseconds later.
gollark: See, physics forbids anyone from knowing if I am quantum or not.
gollark: The apiaristic uncertainty principle forbids this.
gollark: Ah, yet another apiocryptofinancioform.

References

  1. http://mocaga.org/collections/permanent-art-collection/kim-hoeckele/
  2. "Kim Hoeckele on Artfare". Artfare. Retrieved 2020-02-11.
  3. "Queens International 2018: Volumes". www.queensmuseum.org. Retrieved 2020-02-11.
  4. "Kim Hoeckele – PHROOM". Retrieved 2020-02-11.
  5. "Info". Kim Hoeckele. Retrieved 2020-02-11.
  6. "Info". Kim Hoeckele. Retrieved 2020-02-11.
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