Sandy Skoglund

Sandy Skoglund (born September 11, 1946) is an American photographer and installation artist.[1]

Sandy Skoglund
Skoglund in 2013
Born (1946-09-11) September 11, 1946
NationalityAmerican
EducationSmith College, Massachusetts / University of Iowa, Iowa
Known forPhotography, Sculpture, Installation
Notable work
Radioactive Cats (1980)
Sock Situation (1986)
The Cocktail Party (1992)
Shimmering Madness (1998)
Raining Pop Corn (2001)
MovementSurrealism
Websitehttp://www.sandyskoglund.com/

Skoglund creates surrealist images by building elaborate sets or tableaux, furnishing them with carefully selected colored furniture and other objects, a process of which takes her months to complete. Finally, she photographs the set, mostly including live models. The works are characterized by an overwhelming amount of one object and either bright, contrasting colors or a monochromatic color scheme.[2]

Biography

Skoglund was born in Weymouth, Massachusetts on September 11, 1946. She spent her childhood all over the country including the states Maine, Connecticut, and California. She studied both art history and studio art at Smith College in Northampton, Massachusetts, graduating in 1968. In 1967, she studied art history through her college's study abroad program at the Sorbonne and École du Louvre in Paris, France. After graduating in 1969, she went to graduate school at the University of Iowa, where she studied filmmaking, multimedia art, and printmaking. In 1971, she earned her Master of Arts and in 1972 a Master of Fine Arts in painting.[3]

In 1972, Skoglund began working as a conceptual artist in New York City. She taught herself photography to document her artistic endeavors, and experimenting with themes of repetition. She also become interested in advertising and high technology--trying to marry the commercial look with a noncommercial purpose, combining the technical focus found in the commercial world and bringing that into the fine art studio.[4] Skoglund created repetitive, process-oriented art through the techniques of mark-making and photocopying. For example, her 1973 Crumpled and Copied artwork centered on her repeatedly crumpled and photocopied a piece of paper.[5] In 1978, she had produced a series of repetitious food item still life images. These photographs of food were presented in geometric and brightly colored environments so that the food becomes an integral part to the overall patterning, as in Cubed Carrots and Kernels of Corn,[5]with its checkerboard of carrots on a white-spotted red plate placed on a cloth in the same pattern. Skoglund's works are quirky and idiosyncratic, and as former photography critic for The New York Times Andy Grundberg describes, they "evoke adult fears in a playful, childlike context".

One of her most-known works, entitled Radioactive Cats, features green-painted clay cats running amok in a gray kitchen. An older man sits in a chair with his back facing the camera while his elderly wife looks into a refrigerator that is the same color as the walls. "The artist sculpted the life-size cats herself using chicken wire and plaster, and painted them bright green. She acquired used furniture and constructed a painted gray set, then asked two elderly neighbors living in her apartment building in New York City to pose as models."[6] The end product is a very evocative photograph. In an on-line Getty Center for Education in the Arts forum,Terry Barrett and Sydney Walker (2013) identify two viable interpretations of Radioactive Cats. The first is about social indifference to the elderly and the second is nuclear war and its aftermath, suggested by the artist’s title.[6]

Her 1990 work, "Fox Games has a similar feel to Radioactive Cats";it unleashes the imagination of the viewer is allowed to roam freely. A third and final often recognized piece by her features numerous fish hovering above people in bed late at night and is called Revenge of the Goldfish. The piece was used as cover art for the Inspiral Carpets album of the same name.[7]

Skoglund was an art professor at the University of Hartford between 1973 and 1976. She is currently teaching photography and art installation/multimedia at Rutgers University in New Jersey.

In 2000, the Galerie Guy Bärtschi in Geneva, Switzerland held an exhibition of 30 works by Sandy Skoglund, which served as a modest retrospective. The photographs ranged from the plates on tablecloths of the late 1970s to the more spectacular works of the 1980s and 1990s. The critic who reviewed the exhibition, Richard Leydier, commented that Skoglund criticism is littered with interpretations of all kinds, whether feminist, sociological, psychoanalytical or whatever. But, Skoglund claims not to be aware of these reading, saying, "What is the meaning of my work? For me, it's really in doing it."[8]

In 2008, Skoglund completed a series titled "True Fiction Two". This project is similar to the "True Fiction" series that she began in 1986. This series was not completed due to the discontinuation of materials that Skoglund was using. Kodak canceled the production of the dye that Skoglund was using for her prints. Each image in "True Fiction Two" has been meticulously crafted to assimilate the visual and photographic possibilities now available in digital processes.

Her works are held in numerous museum collections including the Museum of Contemporary Photography,[9] San Francisco Museum of Modern Art[10], Montclair Art Museum and Dayton Art Institute.[11]

Skoglund holds a faculty position at the Department of Arts, Culture and Media of University of Rutgers–Newark in Newark, New Jersey.

gollark: Another issue of Go: the divide between "smart people" (compiler writers) and users, who are not worthy of the generics.
gollark: Yes, that's probably more accurate.
gollark: <@301092081827577866> A lie, too.
gollark: I.e. defining containers containing a type of thing typesafely.
gollark: <@301092081827577866> generics: the ability to define functions/types which work on multiple types, basically.

References

  1. Charles Hagen (September 23, 1994). "Art in Review". dagbladet. Retrieved 2010-07-22.
  2. "Sandy Skogland Biography". Art Galleries Switzerland. Archived from the original on 2007-09-29. Retrieved 2007-08-26.
  3. Tarlow, Lois. "Sandy Skoglund". Art New England. 19: 25 via Art & Architecture Source.
  4. Grant, Catherine M. (2002). "Skoglund, Sandy". Grove Art Online. doi:10.1093/gao/9781884446054.article.t097698. Retrieved 2020-03-31.
  5. Dalton, Robert. "Interpreting and Responding to Contemporary Photography through Creative Writing". Canadian Review of Art Education: Research & Issues. 42: 12–26 via Art & Architecture Source.
  6. Leydier, Richard. "Sandy Skoglund: Galerie Guy Bärtschi". Art-Press. no. 257: 65–66.
  7. mocp.org
  8. sfmoma.org Archived 2010-07-28 at the Wayback Machine
  9. http://www.daytonartinstitute.org/art/collection-highlights/american/shimmering-madness

Further reading

  • Faulconer Gallery, Daniel Strong, Milton Severe, Marvin Heiferman, and Douglas Dreishpoon. Raining Popcorn: Sandy Skoglund. Grinnell, Iowa: Grinnell College, Faulconer Gallery, 2001.
  • Rosenblum, Naomi (2014). A history of women photographers. New York: Abbeville. OCLC 946544670.
  • Rosenblum, Robert, Linda Muehlig, Ann H. Sievers, Carol Squiers, and Sandy Skoglund. Sandy Skoglund: Reality Under Siege : a Retrospective. London: Harry N. Abrams, 1998.
  • Skoglund, Sandy (1992). Sandy Skoglund : 28 d'abril al 31 de maig 1992. Barcelona: Sala Catalunya de la Fundació "La Caixa". OCLC 27437229.
  • Skoglund, Sandy (2009). The artificial mirror. Roma: Contrasto due srl. OCLC 693751458.
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