27 August 2020

Apart at the Seams, 2020, jean seams, Singer sewing machine and table, 41 x 36 x 22 inches

top row: Eye Level, 2020, 100 jean flies, linen thread, 177 x 10¼ x 1 inches bottom row: Eye Level of an Average Six Year Old Boy, 2020, 100 jean flies, metal pendant on chain, linen thread, 176 x 9 x 1 inches

Eye Level (detail), 2020, 100 jean flies, linen thread, 177 x 10¼ x 1 inches

Balled Up, 2020, jeans, chairs, hardware

All Together Now 05, 2020, jean remnants, thread

All Together Now 09, 2020, jean remnants, thread

 

All Together Now 08, 2020, jean remnants, thread

All Together Now 04, 2020, jean remnants, thread

All Together Now 03, 2020, jean remnants, thread

All Together Now 02, 2020, jean remnants, thread

All Together Now 01, 2020, jean remnants, thread

VirsikLeah_byLauraVanDuren

Leah Virsik in her studio. Photo: Laura Van Duren

The Japanese word for cut, kire, is more connected to aesthetics than its English counterpart. The aim of cutting is to create ma, a word that roughly translates as negative space or betweenness. Jeans, made of cotton and indigo, are deeply rooted in slavery. Through an act of unmaking, I use Japanese shears to dissect and strip (kire) the functionality of clothing, focusing on the material’s meaning. This work speaks of my own complicity in systemic racial injustice. I expose seams from below the surface, cut and assemble individual flies, and roll up balls of jean strips. No longer a castoff, this material is imbued with potentiality and through my process of close examination (ma), it remakes me.

25% of the artist’s proceeds will go to the Ella Baker Center for Human Rights and the Equal Justice Initiative.

From 2016–2019, I worked as the Gallery Director for the Adobe Art Gallery, Castro Valley run by Hayward Area Recreation and Park District, (H.A.R.D.) A core group of artists exhibited with this community gallery and as a way to create a greater connection between the two, I featured their artwork on the publicity postcards.

As part of my tenure, I curated, publicized and produced five annual art exhibitions. I interfaced with artists, managed a budget, staff and coordinated volunteers. I organized gallery tours and worked with TK teachers and students to develop art projects based on exhibits. I raised $12K in an inaugural fundraiser for new mobile walls and lighting and brought in $5K in art sales.

From 2019–2020, after the Adobe Art Gallery was no longer run by H.A.R.D., I managed and produced one final exhibit: the 42nd Area Artists’ Annual Juried Exhibition at PhotoCentral Gallery, produced a slideshow of the artwork and trained staff.

42nd Area Artists’ Annual Juried Exhibition postcard, PhotoCentral Gallery, 2020, 4×9 inches

OPEN: Hayward Area Recreation and Park District Student Exhibition postcard, Adobe Art Gallery, 2019, 5×7 inches

Spring Open Exhibition: Celebrating H.A.R.D. at 75 exhibition postcard, Adobe Art Gallery, 2019, 5×7 inches

41st Area Artists’ Annual Juried Exhibition postcard, Adobe Art Gallery, 2018, 5×7 inches

Elevate: Adobe Art Gallery’s Inaugural Fundraiser & Silent Auction Exhibition postcard, Adobe Art Gallery, 2018, 4×6 inches

Nature and Abstraction exhibition postcard, Alameda County Administration Building, 2018, 4×9 inches

The Magic of Collaboration exhibition postcard, Adobe Art Gallery, 2018, 5×7 inches

The Magic of Collaboration exhibition wall label (8×7 inches) and display, Adobe Art Gallery, 2018 (featuring the work of Laura Van Duren and Kathleen King)

The Magic of Collaboration exhibition display, Adobe Art Gallery, 2018 (featuring the work of Laura Van Duren and Kathleen King, shift-lab, and Maddy Daddy (Jason Engelund and Maddy))

The Magic of Collaboration exhibition display, Adobe Art Gallery, 2018 (artwork by Dawline-Jane Oni-Eseleh and Ahran Lee and Vida Vazquez, Maddy Daddy (Jason Engelund and Maddy) and shift-lab

The Magic of Collaboration exhibition display, Adobe Art Gallery, 2018 (artwork by J. M. Golding and Al Brydon and Becca Barolli and Rebecca Frantz)

The Magic of Collaboration press release, Adobe Art Gallery, 2018, 8 1/2 x 11 inches

The View From Here, Spring at the Adobe Art Gallery exhibition postcard, Adobe Art Gallery, 2018, 5×7 inches

Anything Goes, Almost, A.R.T., Inc. Members’ Exhibition postcard, Adobe Art Gallery, 2018, 5×7 inches

Runes Revealed–Contemporary Artists Respond to an Ancient Alphabet: A Mixed-Media Exhibition by Nordic 5 Arts postcard, Adobe Art Gallery, 2017, 5×7 inches

40th Area Artists’ Annual Juried Exhibition: Meaning Through Making postcard, Adobe Art Gallery, 2017, 4×6 inches

Wake, Sleep, Repeat: Repetition in the Everyday exhibition postcard, Adobe Art Gallery, 2017, 4×6 inches

The Artist Within 2 exhibition postcard, Adobe Art Gallery, 2017, 6×4 inches

Looking Forward exhibition postcard, Adobe Art Gallery, 2017, 4×6 inches

Oakland Hills Tennis Club (Fall in Love) postcard, 2019–2020, 6×11 inches

Oakland Hills Tennis Club (Summer Camp) brochure, 2016, 8 1/2×11 inches

 

 

 

27 April 2019
ReCirculate

Re:Circulate, 2019, remains of the artist’s torn prints on Rives BFK, 8½ x 8½ x 1⅜ inches

Re:Circulate (detail), 2019, remains of the artist’s torn prints on Rives BFK, 8½ x 8½ x 1⅜ inches

SCROLL—>  You are Supported More Than You Know, 2019, Mercury 20 Gallery, Oakland, CA

You are Supported More Than You Know, 2019, Mercury 20 Gallery, Oakland, CA

You are Supported More Than You Know, 2019, pillows, pillow cases, 144 x 24 x 14 inches

You are Supported More Than You Know is both the title of this exhibition at Mercury 20 Gallery in 2019 and the name of the sculptural pillow installation that spans the wall from floor to ceiling. The pillow is a means for support for one’s head and a metaphor for one’s dreams. There’s a bit of mystery in how it all works. The title comes from an understanding that when one decides to follow curiosity or pursue passion, the world opens up and offers a wealth of support. The stack of pillows is reminiscent of the Hans Christian Andersen tale, The Princess and the Pea. The princess gets her prince in the end but only in her courage to speak her truth.

Over One’s Head as performed by The Rub, 2019, (corner) wool and cashmere sweaters, polyester stuffing 81 x 24 x 40 inches

The Third Wheel, 2019, found wool and cashmere sweaters, dry cleaning bags, 16 x 21 x 17 inches

Conundra (001), 2019, sweater parts, stuffing, 8 x 4 x 4 inches

These previous three works speak of awkwardness or lack of understanding. Situated in a corner, the large unwieldy form, Over One’s Head as performed by The Rub represents a difficulty or obstacle. Originally situated atop a nightstand, The Rub now performs high above one’s head. The title is inspired by Hamlet’s soliloquy: Hamlet, Act III, Scene I excerpt (To be, or not to be):

To die, to sleep;
To sleep: perchance to dream: ay, there’s the rub;
For in that sleep of death what dreams may come
~William Shakespeare

You are Supported More Than You Know, 2019, Mercury 20 Gallery, Oakland, CA

Through Thick and Thin, 2018–2019, artist’s bedsheets, stuffing

It’s often not until my work is installed that I understand it more fully. Through Thick and Thin is a portrait of my marriage. The bedsheets speak of intimacy and their blue color is associated with faithfulness, depth and stability. Cut into narrow strips, sewn together and stuffed, the bedsheets become a bloated tube resembling entrails or the innermost part of something. Intestines are the part of the body most closely connected with intuition or inner knowing. The continuous line of fiber spans floor to ceiling forming u-shaped curves. As I cross the threshold of my height, I walk into an intimate space that separates me from the rest of the gallery. I am protected here and have the space I need.