Kathleen Kucka (born 1962)
is an American visual artist whose practice includes
abstract paintings, works on paper and prints.
[Mendelsohn, Meredith. "Kathleen Kucka Burns and Pours," ''ARTnews'', December 2004. Retrieved October 11, 2022.][Johnson, Ken]
"Kathleen Kucka,"
''The New York Times'', March 26, 1999. Retrieved October 11, 2022.[Kiener, Robert]
"Controlled Burn: Artist Kathleen Kucka,"
''New England Home Magazine'', Spring 2018. Retrieved October 11, 2022. She is known for work that combines a
conceptual
Conceptual may refer to:
Philosophy and Humanities
*Concept
*Conceptualism
*Philosophical analysis (Conceptual analysis)
*Theoretical definition (Conceptual definition)
*Thinking about Consciousness (Conceptual dualism)
*Pragmatism (Conceptual pr ...
approach with unique, sometimes unpredictable processes of mark-making such as the burning of canvas, pouring paint, and sewing.
[Stevenson, Jonathan]
"Painting's undying versatility,"
''Two Coats of Paint'', September 30, 2021. Retrieved October 11, 2022.[Genocchio, Benjamin]
''The New York Times'', March 2, 2008. Retrieved October 11, 2022. Critics note her work for its highly associative, open-ended quality, which evokes
modernist
Modernism was an early 20th-century movement in literature, visual arts, and music that emphasized experimentation, abstraction, and Subjectivity and objectivity (philosophy), subjective experience. Philosophy, politics, architecture, and soc ...
formalism and natural phenomena from the microcosmic to the macrocosmic.
[Korotkin, Joyce. "Kathleen Kucka," ''New York Art World'', April 2001.][Knight, Christopher]
"Surface and Color in Abstract Group Show,"
''Los Angeles Times'', August 9, 2002. Retrieved October 11, 2022.[Simmons, Todd]
"Clarity Amidst Liberated Perspectives,"
''Gay City News'', September 28, 2011. Retrieved October 11, 2022. Critic
Stephanie Buhmann wrote that Kucka's work is inspired by nature and contemporary abstraction with attention to geometry, and leaves viewers "wondering if we are witnessing a scene documented through a microscope or captured from an aerial view ... we find ourselves reminded of the interrelations between all things, be they of a natural or man-made origin."
[Buhmann, Stephanie. "Kathleen Kucka's Ultrastructures," ''Kathleen Kucka: Ultrastructures'', New York: Brenda Taylor Gallery, 2011.]
Kucka has exhibited at the
Brooklyn Museum
The Brooklyn Museum is an art museum in the New York City borough (New York City), borough of Brooklyn. At , the museum is New York City's second largest and contains an art collection with around 500,000 objects. Located near the Prospect Heig ...
,
Columbia Museum of Art
The Columbia Museum of Art is an art museum in the American city of Columbia, South Carolina.
History
The Columbia Museum of Art was originally in the 1908 private residence of the city's Taylor family. Located on Senate Street in Columbia, ad ...
,
Norton Museum of Art
The Norton Museum of Art is an art museum in West Palm Beach, Florida. The museum has a collection that includes over 8,200 works, with a concentration in Western art history, European, Visual arts of the United States, American, and Chinese art ...
and the
Drawing Center
The Drawing Center is a museum and a nonprofit exhibition space in Manhattan, New York City, that focuses on the exhibition of drawings, both historical and contemporary.
History
The Drawing Center was founded by former assistant curator of dr ...
, among other venues.
[Watson, Neil. "Close Cover Before Striking," i]
''Burn: Artists Play with Fire''
by Neil Watson, West Palm Beach, FL: Norton Museum of Art, 2001. Retrieved October 11, 2022. Her work belongs to permanent art collections including those of the
Birmingham Museum of Art
The Birmingham Museum of Art is a museum in Birmingham, Alabama. Its collection includes more than 24,000 paintings, sculptures, prints, drawings, and decorative arts representing various cultures, including Asian, European, United States, Amer ...
,
Borusan Contemporary (Turkey), and
Weatherspoon Art Museum
The Weatherspoon Art Museum is located at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and is one of the largest collections of modern and contemporary art in the southeast with a focus on American art. Its programming includes fifteen or more ...
.
Birmingham Museum of Art
The Birmingham Museum of Art is a museum in Birmingham, Alabama. Its collection includes more than 24,000 paintings, sculptures, prints, drawings, and decorative arts representing various cultures, including Asian, European, United States, Amer ...
''Untitled'', Kathleen E. Kucka
Collection. [Borusan Contemporary]
Kathleen Kucka, ''Radiating Bands of Color''
Artists. Retrieved October 11, 2022.[Weatherspoon Art Museum]
Kathleen Kucka
Artist. Retrieved October 11, 2022. She lives in New York City and
Falls Village, Connecticut
Falls Village is a village and census-designated place in the town of Canaan in Litchfield County, Connecticut, United States. As of the 2010 census it had a population of 538, out of 1,234 in the entire town of Canaan. Because Falls Village i ...
.
[Lang, Joel]
"Kathleen Kucka harnesses the flame of an electric charcoal lighter to play with light and shadows,”
''Connecticut Post
The ''Connecticut Post'' is a daily newspaper located in Bridgeport, Connecticut. It serves Fairfield County and the Lower Naugatuck Valley. Municipalities in the Post's circulation area include Ansonia, Bridgeport, Darien, Derby, Easton ...
'', March 29, 2020. Retrieved October 11, 2022.
Education and career
Kucka was born in 1962, in
East Hartford, Connecticut
East Hartford is a New England town, town in Hartford County, Connecticut, United States. The population was 51,045 at the 2020 United States Census, 2020 census. The town is located on the east bank of the Connecticut River, directly across from ...
.
The family moved to New York City in 1971.
[Braff, Phyllis]
"Young Artists Finding Island Fuels Creative Juices,"
''The New York Times'', July 26, 1998. Retrieved October 11, 2022. She earned a BFA degree from
Cooper Union
The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art, commonly known as Cooper Union, is a private college on Cooper Square in Lower Manhattan, New York City. Peter Cooper founded the institution in 1859 after learning about the government-s ...
in 1984.
[Eskenazi School of Art, Architecture + Design]
"Kathleen Kucka: Material Way, A 20 Year Survey,"
Exhibitions. Retrieved October 11, 2022. After graduating, she began exhibiting her work, appearing in shows in New York at
Franklin Furnace Archive
Franklin Furnace Archive, Inc. is an arts organization-in-residence at Pratt Institute in Brooklyn, New York. Since its inception in 1976, Franklin Furnace has been identifying, presenting, archiving, and making avant-garde art available to the ...
,
P.S. 122, the Drawing Center, and Thread Waxing Space between 1988 and 1995. During that period, she also earned an MFA degree from
Hunter College
Hunter College is a public university in New York City, United States. It is one of the constituent colleges of the City University of New York and offers studies in more than one hundred undergraduate and postgraduate fields across five schools ...
in 1994.
In her later career, Kucka has had solo exhibitions at the Jeffrey Coploff, Kristen Frederickson Contemporary Art and Brenda Taylor galleries in New York,
[Liberman, Rachael]
"Colorful Topographies: Kathleen Kucka's Multi-Dimensional Impressions,"
''Gay City News'', October 11, 2006. Retrieved October 11, 2022. the Marsha Mateyka Gallery in Washington, DC, Galerie Roger Katwijk in Amsterdam, and Heather Gaudio Fine Art in Connecticut.
In addition to her art practice, Kucka is a curator.
[Buhmann, Stephanie]
"Buhmann on Art: Paintings Manifest as Portals in 'The Roaming Eye,'"
''AMNY'', November 2, 2017. Retrieved October 11, 2022. She founded and directs the Furnace – Art on Paper Archive in Falls Village, Connecticut. Between 2015 and 2018, she was the director and curator of the Shirley Fiterman Art Center in Lower Manhattan.
Work and reception
Kucka's work explores image- and mark-making through unconventional physical interactions and transformations that balance intention against largely unpredictable or uncontrollable forces such as extreme heat or gravity.
Her processes have included sewing layers of canvas or fabric onto painted pieces, pouring paint, and burning paper and canvas with various household implements.
[Dawson, Jessica]
"Three Artists Of Different Stripes,"
''The Washington Post'', March 21, 2002. Retrieved October 11, 2022. She has often structured her compositions in linear, gridded or circular patterns that both invoke modernist movements such as
minimalism
In visual arts, music, and other media, minimalism is an art movement that began in the post-war era in western art. The movement is often interpreted as a reaction to abstract expressionism and modernism; it anticipated contemporary post-mi ...
and call to mind themes of natural destruction and regeneration.
[Jenkins, Mark]
" Works on Paper at Marsha Mateyka Gallery,"
''The Washington Post'', January 14, 2016. Retrieved October 11, 2022. Her "burn" works are inspired by twentieth-century artists such as
Lucio Fontana
Lucio Fontana (; 19 February 1899 – 7 September 1968) was an Italian Argentines, Argentine-Italian painter, sculptor, and theorist. He is known as the founder of Spatialism and exponent of Abstract art, abstract painting as the f ...
and the German
Zero Group, minimalists who sought to resurrect art by first destroying or effacing canvasses.
Writer Jonathan Stevenson wrote that Kucka's burning process as "an exercise in artful destruction, of sustainment against risk, more daring than ordinary painting … Within the canvas, this is swashbuckling work, adventurous but meticulously controlled."
Early work
In the late 1980s and 1990s, Kucka used irons, hotplates and charcoal lighters to scorch and mark repetitive patterns on canvas and paper surfaces, drawing on aspects of formalism, the
Pattern and Decoration
A pattern is a regularity in the world, in human-made design, or in abstract ideas. As such, the elements of a pattern repeat in a predictable manner. A geometric pattern is a kind of pattern formed of geometric shapes and typically repeated li ...
movement, and in her use of domestic tools,
feminist
Feminism is a range of socio-political movements and ideology, ideologies that aim to define and establish the political, economic, personal, and social gender equality, equality of the sexes. Feminism holds the position that modern soci ...
critique.
[Braff, Phyllis]
"Up-to-Date Ideas From Emerging Talents,"
''The New York Times'', May 2, 1999. Retrieved October 11, 2022.[Buhmann, Stephanie]
''New York Studio Conversations: Seventeen Women Talk About Art''
Berlin: Green Box, Kunst Editionen 2016. Retrieved October 11, 2022. Critics characterized this work as naturalistic and abstract but not random, with each burn mark developing uniquely in an organic way, and in tandem, producing rhythmic sequences.
[Braff, Phyllis]
''The New York Times'', January 25, 1998. Retrieved October 11, 2022. In a series of group show reviews, ''New York Times'' critic Phyllis Braff described the burn holes as evoking "the elegance of velvet"
[Braff, Phyllis]
''The New York Times'', May 31, 1998. Retrieved October 11, 2022. and cascading in disorienting, undulating swirls of motion (e.g., ''Burn Out No. 2'', 1997).
[Braff, Phyllis]
''The New York Times'', December 7, 1997. Retrieved October 11, 2022. Much of this early work was monochromatic or black and white and employed minimal, gridded presentations and framing that emphasized the conceptual and sculptural aspect of the work; in several pieces Kucka cut out or partially burned out shapes—sometimes leaving hanging flaps and exposing the painting supports.
[Harrison, Helen A]
''The New York Times'', March 20, 1994. Retrieved October 11, 2022. Concurrent with the burn works, she also produced pieces incorporating shapes and pockets sewn in patterns onto canvasses.
Pours
In the 2000s, Kucka shifted from the burn works to a second, ongoing body of paintings, largely in response to the
9/11 attack
The September 11 attacks, also known as 9/11, were four coordinated Islamist terrorist suicide attacks by al-Qaeda against the United States in 2001. Hijackers in the September 11 attacks#Hijackers, Nineteen terrorists hijacked four com ...
on the
World Trade Center
World Trade Centers are the hundreds of sites recognized by the World Trade Centers Association.
World Trade Center may also refer to:
Buildings
* World Trade Center (1973–2001), a building complex that was destroyed during the September 11 at ...
, which was only ten blocks away from her living space at the time.
In these works, she poured acrylic paint directly onto wooden or aluminum panels, eschewing brushes and leaving flows of paint to be directed by gravity and fluid dynamics.
[Schmerler, Sarah. "Fluid Flow," ''Time Out New York'', July 27–August 3, 2000.] Influenced by
Yayoi Kusama
is a Japanese contemporary artist who works primarily in sculpture and Installation art, installation, and she is also active in painting, performance art, performance, video art, Fashion design, fashion, poetry, fiction, and other arts. Her wo ...
’s "Infinity Net" paintings of polka dot fields, they were dominated by floating, circular forms, dizzying patterns, and surfaces of surprising depth created by varying densities and viscosities of paint; those qualities were enhanced by Kucka's use of a spare tonal range and a limited, nuanced palette of ivories, pale taupe, honey and grays.
Critics noted the paintings' emphasis on the artmaking process and balance between abstraction and allusive suggestions of, for example, polished
agate
Agate ( ) is a banded variety of chalcedony. Agate stones are characterized by alternating bands of different colored chalcedony and sometimes include macroscopic quartz. They are common in nature and can be found globally in a large number of d ...
specimens, cells, bone and cranial matter, or melted vanilla ice cream, among others (e.g., ''Obscure Suggestive'', 2002).
''The New York Times
Ken Johnson described the works in an exhibition at Jeffrey Coploff as "physically appealing abstractions … all-over irregular patterns of concentric whorls suggestive of wood grain or enlarged fingerprints."
A 2004 ''ARTnews'' review described the divergent textures and patterns formed by strips, sheaths and drooping arcs of poured paint (e.g., in the honeycomb-like painting, ''Liberated Forms'') as "evoking the organic complexities of nature and the slickness of industrial and graphic design."
From 2006 to 2011, Kucka presented new works employing a greater use of color—often painted linen backgrounds over which she layered maze-like, topographical ribbons of paint suggesting biomorphic or cosmological forms.
[Buhmann, Stephanie]
"After summer hiatus, galleries return to form,"
''The Villager'', September 14, 2011. Retrieved October 11, 2022. Reviews noted tensions between the often-bright plastic qualities of the materials, the built-up textures and the nuanced handling of space; they induced a perceptual wavering between microcosm and macrocosm, with the paintings' graphic appearance at a distance giving way close up to contours, painterliness, surprising detail, and rhythmic patterns.
Stephanie Buhmann wrote, "In Kucka’s work, everything seems to be in flux, suggesting transient states that can be found within cell structures or cosmic star constellations."
Later work
In 2013, Kucka returned to burning canvas and paper, eventually setting up a converted-barn studio in Falls Village, Connecticut (in 2015), which allowed for more controlled burning.
These later paintings have often been made by suspending one canvas over another complementary-hued canvas, and then using an electric charcoal lighter to burn holes in the upper canvas to reveal the canvas underneath.
The overlay creates an interplay of light and shadow and an illusion of depth that changes as viewers move around them.
She makes the burns in kinetic concentric, linear or swirling patterns, as in ''Field of Happening'' (2018). In the predominantly brown work, ''Sinkhole'' (2018), she created roughly 250 ovoid, similarly slanting burn holes, arranged in rows.
Kucka's later work—described by ''Washington Post'' critic Mark Jenkins as "minimalist with a sensuous touch"—has been exhibited at Marsha Mateyka (Washington), Heather Gaudio Fine Art (Connecticut), and Transmitter Gallery (New York).
[Jenkins, Mark]
''The Washington Post'', December 15, 2016. Retrieved October 11, 2022.
Recognition
Kucka's work belongs to the permanent collections of the
Arkansas Art Center
The Arkansas Museum of Fine Arts (AMFA), formerly known as the Arkansas Arts Center, is an art museum located in MacArthur Park, Little Rock, Arkansas. The museum's most recent expansion and renovation was designed by architecture and urban des ...
,
Birmingham Museum of Art
The Birmingham Museum of Art is a museum in Birmingham, Alabama. Its collection includes more than 24,000 paintings, sculptures, prints, drawings, and decorative arts representing various cultures, including Asian, European, United States, Amer ...
,
Borusan Contemporary (Turkey),
Museum of Modern Art Franklin Furnace Archive,
Norton Museum of Art
The Norton Museum of Art is an art museum in West Palm Beach, Florida. The museum has a collection that includes over 8,200 works, with a concentration in Western art history, European, Visual arts of the United States, American, and Chinese art ...
,
Weatherspoon Art Museum
The Weatherspoon Art Museum is located at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro and is one of the largest collections of modern and contemporary art in the southeast with a focus on American art. Its programming includes fifteen or more ...
,
and Werner Kramarsky Collection, as well as to corporate collections.
She has received artist residencies from the Vermont Studio Center and
Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts
Bemis Center for Contemporary Arts is located in the Old Market Historic District of downtown Omaha, Nebraska, at the corner of 12th Street and Leavenworth Street. In addition to an international artist-in-residence program, Bemis Center hosts te ...
.
References
External links
*
Marsh Mateyka Gallery
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kucka, Kathleen
1962 births
Living people
21st-century American painters
21st-century American women painters
Artists from Hartford, Connecticut
Cooper Union alumni
Hunter College alumni
Painters from New York (state)