Kaleena Stasiak, eternal return, 2018 |
The Georgia Museum of Art will soon host the
annual Master of Fine Arts Degree Candidates exit show. The exhibition will
display the creative works of 16 students slated to graduate from the Lamar
Dodd School of the Art in May. This week, we continue to spotlight a few of
these unique artists with information on Kaleena Stasiak.
Kaleena Stasiak grew up near Niagara
Falls before moving to Toronto, where she received her bachelor’s degree in
printmaking from the Ontario College of Art and Design. She then found herself
drawn to the interdisciplinary nature of the master of fine arts program at the
University of Georgia. She continued her studies in printmaking and book arts, but
has recently ventured into more three-dimensional works made of ceramics, wood
and foam. Her works in the upcoming MFA Degree Candidates exit show will mainly
feature the latter two categories.
Through her work, Stasiak responds to the
history of the South and how that history is represented today. Southern
architecture and domestic objects tell the story of “us,” a fact readily seen
in her art. From hand turning spindles to carving foam, Stasiak’s works evidence
a beautiful and intriguing foray into Southern material culture. Her own
adventure, a perpetual learning experience, takes viewers into the world of the
South, turning truths the audience might take for granted on their heads.
Stasiak is “curious about exploring . . .
how tourism is marketed in the South,” and, as she recognizes her own tendency
to romanticise the South, she “also wants to subvert then call into question things
that are glossed over.”
As she plays with key architectural and
material tropes, she leads the viewer to appreciate and simultaneously question
southern romanticism. Viewers will certainly leave her portion of the exit show
considering familiar local buildings and heirloom furniture in a new light.
To see Stasiak’s
work, along with that of all the other MFA candidates, you can visit the exit show, on view April 7 – May 20, 2018.
--
Savannah
Guenthner
Intern,
Department of Communications
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