Kristin Mariani: Two Sides of the Horizon
@ 1100 Florence
1100 Florence Ave, Evanston, IL 60202
Opening Saturday, February 2nd, from 5PM - 7PM
On view through Thursday, February 21st
Artist Kristin Mariani will be the Artist in Residence at 1100 Florence Gallery this February, “Two Sides of the Horizon”
Meet Kristin and learn about her process Saturday, Feb. 2, 5-7p, during First Saturday Evanston Art Events.
Project Description and Residency Hours
Two Sides to the Horizon – Is an extended wall installation to reflect the viewpoints from inside and outside the corner space of 1100 Florence. Merging these viewpoints over the four week period of the residency, this installation will evolve, merging multiple vantages into the visible sphere of the gallery space.
Below is a schedule where the public is invited to come into the gallery space to see Kristin’s works in process.
Week 1:
Friday 2/1 12-3:00 p.m.
Saturday 2/2 5-7 p.m.
Week 2:
Tuesday 2/5 12-3:00 p.m.
Thursday 2/7 3-6:00 p.m.
Friday 2/8 12-3:00 p.m.
Saturday 2/9 12-3:00 p.m.
Week 3:
Tuesday 2/12 1-4:00 p.m.
Thursday 2/14 12-3:00 p.m.
Friday 2/15 12-3:00 p.m.
Saturday 2/16 2-3:00 p.m.
Week 4:
Tuesday 2/19 12-3:00 p.m.
Thursday 2/21 11:00 a.m. – 2:00 p.m.
Artist Bio & Statement
Bio: Kristin Mariani is a Chicago based dressmaker, designer, artist, and educator. In her art and design practice she investigates hidden layers of labor discovered inside found cloth and garments, incorporating physical responses to material that emphasize process, chance, and patience. In 2000 she founded her label RedShift; a line of contemporary couture created from salvaged materials and found garments. Her designs have been distributed internationally. She is faculty at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, and an artist member of The Arts Club, Chicago. She maintains an interdisciplinary practice creating works for dance, performance, and installation.
Artist Statement:
My practice is an ongoing discourse between design and art. I acknowledge the unstable distinctions between the two disciplines, and my investigations unfold in this unstable territory, continually questioning how the body is figured through fashion, place, and labor.
Dressmakers are often confined to small spaces, small motor skills, mechanical cycles and repetitive processes. Handiwork is concealed in the inner linings of a garment. I don’t always want to stay inside of a dress. How can I use my skill set to address other spaces that the body occupies? How can I build coherent relationships from disparate parts? How can I connect the flow of raw material in my studio to a larger material stream and thought process?
My raw material is a by-product of my dressmaking process and comes in parts. Thread is my drawing tool and connective device to reintegrate cloth fragments and garment remnants into coherent visual relationships. Stitching on two-dimensional surfaces enables me to create fronts that reveal what is commonly concealed in the facades of fashion. Structuring a crosshatch of materials to establish a new value for what is typically discarded, I deploy aesthetic strategies and skill- based knowledge to probe the historical, material, and labor-oriented underpinnings encapsulated in any effort to clothe the body.
-Kristin Mariani
MORE
Kristin Mariani Kristinmariani1[at]gmail.com
http://www.redshiftcouture.com
http://kristinmariani.blogspot.com
Photo Credit: Kirstin Mariani photographed in her studio by Joerg Metzner for his Picturing Evanston project
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