Karen Kilimnik
About
This exhibition is the first significant survey of the work of American artist Karen Kilimnik, a key figure in contemporary art who emerged in the late 1980s and early nineties. Kilimnik was first acclaimed for her so-called scatter-art installations of various bits of pop cultural detritus strewn about a gallery space to create a sensibility somewhere between the postminimalism of Robert Morris and Barry Le Va and the backstage of a fashion preview. She has recently become recognized for paintings that combine art historical tradition, modish topicality, and an awkward intimacy and fragility.
Kilimnik’s work cultivates an unabashed sense of romanticism yet it retains a knowing criticality and awareness of the personal desire that we invest in both vaunted works of visual art and the more fleeting intrigue of celebrities and superstars. It also draws on the literary traditions of gothic mystery and fairy tales, presenting narratives that unfold over the course of a series of related paintings. Her expansive approach to cultural forms and the convincing inventiveness of her installations has had a profound effect on many young artists working today.
This exhibition presents a survey of Kilimnik’s paintings and installation-based works since the late 1980s and is curated by Ingrid Schaffner, Senior Curator at the ICA Philadelphia. The MCA presentation is coordinated by MCA Curator Dominic Molon.
Funding
Karen Kilimnik is organized by the Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania. ICA acknowledges the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts for generous exhibition support. ICA is grateful to Barbara B. and Theodore R. Aronson for primary support of the catalog and to the Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation and 303 Gallery, New York. Additional support for the exhibition is provided by Areté Foundation; Barbara B. and Theodore R. Aronson; Arthur Dantchik, The Dietrich Foundation Inc.; The Toby Fund; David and Geraldine Pincus; The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation; the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania Council on the Arts; the Institute of Contemporary Art Overseers; friends and members of ICA; and the University of Pennsylvania. ICA is grateful to the Chodorow Exhibition Initiative Fund for tour support and to Waterhouse Wallhangings' support of the tour venues. Support for the Chicago presentation is generously provided by Nancy Lauter McDougal and Alfred L. McDougal.
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