PHOTO/BRAD BYNUM
Female gaze
Clockwise from top left, Kathryn Carlson, Kaitlin Bryson, Ashlea Clark and Ana Leyva are exhibting artwork together at Gallery on West Dick.
University of Nevada, Reno BFA students Six young artists, all women, are graduating from the University of Nevada, Reno’s by Bachelor of Fine Arts program this Brad Bynum spring. Two of them, photographers Amy Aramanda and Miwah Lee, have bradb@ thesis exhibitions currently on display at newsreview.com the Holland Project Gallery. The other four artists—Kaitlin Bryson, Kathryn Carlson, Ashlea Clark and Ana Leyva— will have a group exhibition on April 20 at warehouse space on Dickerson Road being rechristened for the occasion Amy Aramanda and as Gallery at West Dick. It was a lateMiwah Lee’s work is at hour replacement location after two the Holland Project, 140 previously planned exhibition spaces Vesta St., through April 24. Kaitlin Bryson, fell through. The works of Aramanda and Lee fit Kathryn Carlson, Ashlea Clark and Ana Leyva’s together naturally—both are large-scale work will be Gallery at photographers whose works explore West Dick, 2221 Dickerson Road, April 16 changing conceptions of identity. through 27, with an In contrast, the quartet exhibition opening reception on promises to be intriguing because of Friday, April 20, from its diversity. Each artist has a unique 6 to 8 p.m. approach and aesthetic.
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Bryson’s work is truly multimedia. It consists of paintings, sculptures, a video and a performance. “Transformations and Convolutions,” one of the centerpieces, consists of 243 Dewey Decimal library cards that have been cut up, painted on, and otherwise modified, transformed into a mural of reorganization and declassification. “The work in the show is all about transformation,” she says. Another of her pieces is “Shelf Life,” an exploration of death and decay—integral factors in all processes of transformation—in fruits. The piece consists of various pieces of fruit—apples and grapefruits, among others—in various stages of decomposition or, inversely, preservation—encased in polyurethane, giving off a strange glow like some sort of sickly hard candy. “Phantasies,” Clark’s portion of the exhibition, will be a surreal, dreamlike immersive environment, made of glass, clay and monotype prints. The installation will feature creatures like “The
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Hoarder,” a large, one-eyed bird with a nest filled with detached eyeballs. Clark says she enjoys creating works based in fantasy rather than reality. “I live in normal reality,” she says. “I’d rather not create it. I’d rather make something new.” Carlson’s work draws from Renaissance era symbolism. “A Bittersweet Exchange” is a 7-foot-tall altarpiece, with paintings on either side. The painting on one side depicts a disembodied hand, with a red string wrapped around the wrist and a key dangling from the other end. The other painting depicts a vivid, hallucinatory
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butterfly. Carlson says the two paintings represent the two sides of being bipolar—depression and mania. “You have to walk around the altar to see them both,” she says. “Just like you can’t witness two sides of a person at once. They’re two different things that are part of one whole.” Finally, Leyva’s work features men depicted in lightly sexy poses. She considers herself a descendent of pinup artists like Alberto Vargas. “His work was sexualized but wholesome,” she says. She says there’s a critical element to her work. It’s a reversal of the traditional and ubiquitous male gaze that objectifies women wherever it finds them. However, she also says she wants to present her subjects in a way that’s funny, endearing and captures their individual personalities. “My work’s about being a heterosexual female,” she says. Ω
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