Jennifer Bolande

Jennifer Bolande is an American postconceptual artist whose work employs various media—primarily photography, sculpture, film and site-specific installations in which she explores affinities between particular sets of objects and images and the mercurial meanings they manufacture.

Jennifer Bolande
Born1957 (age 6566)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materNSCAD University
Known forVisual Art
Notable workThe Composition of Decomposition (2020), Visible Distance/Second Sight (2017), Tower of Movie Marquees, (2010) Milk Crown (1989)
MovementInterdisciplinary
AwardsGuggenheim Fellowship, Andy Warhol Foundation Fellowship, NYFA, Tesuque Foundation
Websitehttps://jbolande.com/

Bolande earned a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Nova Scotia College of Art & Design in 1979. She is a Professor in New Genres in the Department of Art at UCLA.[1] She lives and works in Los Angeles and Joshua Tree, California.

Bolande emerged as an artist in the late 1970s, working initially in dance, choreography and drawing. In the early 1980s, she advanced the ideas and strategies proposed by the Pictures Generation movement and began working with found images, re-photography, appropriation, film and installation; taking her place among those artists who have helped to redefine art photography. Bolande takes an intuitive post-conceptual approach to creating conceptual photo-based works in the construction of a coherent visual language. This was early on demonstrated in 1984 with her participation in the Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center CEPA Gallery group exhibition MOTIVES, curated by Claudia Gould.[2] Having exhibited at prominent New York galleries such as Nature Morte Gallery, Metro Pictures, Artists Space, and The Kitchen, Bolande gained early recognition for her art that delves into the materiality of photographs. [3]

A retrospective exhibition of her work was organized in 2010 by the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee and traveled to the Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia,[4] and the Luckman Gallery at California State University, Los Angeles. A monograph on her work was published by JRP-Ringier[5] and distributed by Distributed Art Publishers in conjunction with the retrospective show. Her award-winning site-specific project Visible Distance/Second Sight was featured in the inaugural Desert Exhibition of Art, in 2017.[6]

In the early 2000s, she exhibited three times with the New York gallery Alexander and Bonin, who is associated with the Brooke Alexander Gallery. A 2018 exhibition at Pio Pico Gallery, Los Angeles, titled The Composition of Decomposition, included a body of works taking the newspaper as a point of departure for photographs, film and sculptural works.[7][8] She is represented by the gallery Magenta Plains in New York City[9] who also exhibited in 2020 thereThe Composition of Decomposition.[10]

Solo exhibitions

  • The Composition of Decomposition, New York (2020)[11]
  • The Composition of Decomposition, Pio Pico, Los Angeles (2018)
  • Measured Against What, Green Gallery, Chicago (2014)
  • Landmarks, a Survey Exhibition, Luckman Gallery, California State University, Los Angeles (2012)
  • Landmarks, a Survey Exhibition, Institute of Contemporary Art, Philadelphia, PA
  • Landmarks, a Survey Exhibition, Institute of Visual Arts, INOVA, Wisconsin, MI (2010)
  • Mathematics and Myths of Yesterday and Today, Thomas Solomon & Cottage Home, Los Angeles
  • Plywood Curtains, West of Rome Public Art, citywide installation, Los Angeles
  • Smoke Screens, Alexander and Bonin, New York (2008)
  • Earthquake, Alexander and Bonin, New York (2004)
  • Globe Sightings, Fotohof, Salzburg, Austria (2003)
  • Globe Sightings, Alexander and Bonin, New York (2001)
  • The City at Night, Alexander and Bonin, New York (1999)
  • MoMA P.S.1, Long Island City, New York
  • Road Movie, John Gibson Gallery, New York (1995)
  • Kunstraum München, Munich, Germany
  • Kunsthalle Palazzo, Liestal, Switzerland
  • Richard Telles Fine Art, Los Angeles (1994)
  • Metro Pictures, New York (1992)
  • Urbi et Orbi, Paris France (1990)
  • Galleri Nordanstad-Skarstedt, Stockholm, Sweden
  • Margo Leavin Gallery, Los Angeles (1989)
  • Metro Pictures, New York (1988)
  • Galerie Sophia Ungers, Cologne, Germany (1987)
  • Nature Morte, New York (1986)
  • Artists Space, New York (1983)
  • The Kitchen, New York (1982)

Group exhibitions

Fellowships

Bolande is the recipient of fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation, the New York Foundation for the Arts, the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, the Tesuque Foundation, the Canadian Council on the Arts, the Elizabeth Firestone Graham Foundation, and the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.[1]

Artist books

Bolande has published several artist books including The Times, 2016, Excavation Volumes 1-35, 2016, Short Story, 2015, and Space Photography, 2010, published by ZG Press. Also, in 2011, she released the publication ‘Jennifer Bolande: Landmarks.’[12]

Selected public collections

Bolande has work in several collections of public museums and institutions including

Notes

  1. "Jennifer Bolande - Professor, New Genres". UCLA. Retrieved 10 March 2014.
  2. MOTIVES archived at Hallwalls Contemporary Arts Center
  3. "Magenta Plains | Bio". magentaplains.com. Retrieved 2023-06-15.
  4. "A Conversation: Jennifer Bolande and David Robbins". archive.jsonline.com. Retrieved 2020-04-12.
  5. Jennifer Bolande Landmarks ARTBOOK | D.A.P. 2011 Catalog JRP|Ringier Books Exhibition Catalogues 9783037642603.
  6. "Jennifer Bolande". Desert X. Retrieved 2020-04-12.
  7. Berardini, Andrew. ""Andrew Berardini on Jennifer Bolande"" (PDF). Artforum.
  8. de Brugerolle, Marie. "Scoping Things on the Cutting Edge: A conversation between Jennifer Bolande and Marie de Brugerolle" (PDF). Mousse Magazine. Issue 65.
  9. Jennifer Bolande at Magenta Plains
  10. Magenta Plains
  11. Magenta Plains
  12. Bolande, Jennifer (2011). Jennifer Bolande: Landmarks. JRP/Ringier. ISBN 978-3-03764-260-3.
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