After introductory remarks, enjoy a bite to eat and mingle with the artist and Curator of Contemporary Art Sunny Kerr.
Curious about this year’s Stonecroft Artist-in-Residence, Tau Lewis? Find out more about this internationally admired artist and join us for coffee and treats in Etherington House as we kick off the 13-week residency in Kingston. This Canadian artist is the Agnes Etherington Art Centre’s second annual Stonecroft Foundation Artist-in-Residence, hosted in collaboration with Queen’s University’s Department of Gender Studies and BFA (Visual Art) Program.
After introductory remarks, enjoy a bite to eat and mingle with the artist and Curator of Contemporary Art Sunny Kerr.
ARTIST BIOGRAPHY
Tau Lewis (b. 1993) is a Jamaican-Canadian artist living and working in Toronto, Canada. Recent and forthcoming solo exhibitions include: Frieze New York, Atlanta Contemporary, Jeffrey Stark, NY. Recent and forthcoming group exhibitions include: MoMa PS1, New York, Chapter Gallery, New York, COOPER COLE, Toronto, Night Gallery, Los Angeles, New Museum, New York.
Tau Lewis’ self-taught practice is rooted in healing personal, collective and historical traumas through labour. She employs methods of construction such as hand sewing, carving and assemblage to build portraits. She considers the history and symbolism of each material, exploring the political boundaries of nature, identity and authenticity. Her work is bodily and organic, with an explicit strangeness. The materiality of Lewis’ work is often informed by her surrounding environment; she constructs out of found objects and repurposed materials, as well as live plants and organisms sourced from urban and rural landscapes. She connects these acts of repurposing and collecting with diasporic experience. Her portraits are recuperative gestures that investigate black identity and agency, memory and recovery.
Lewis’s recent works consider the undocumented, sometimes inaccessible historical information centres of black life such as the oceans, forests, and deep underground spaces; her figures are often coloured and textured to mimic the oceans, earth, and cosmos. Lewis uses animal and insect imagery as playful and ironic references to the demarcation of black bodies as separate from other genres of being human. Infused with personal belongings, found objects and material markers of time, each portrait is an energetically charged microcosm of memory, the unreal, unbelonging and bulletproof characters of an imaginary landscape realized through sculpture.