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JOAN BANKEMPER - 'The Honey Collection'
February 10 – March 15, 2007
On February 10, Joan Bankemper's first solo show with Nancy Hoffman opens in the Project Space and continues through March 15. There will be a reception for the artist in the gallery on Saturday, February 24th, from 4-6 pm.


Joan Bankemper, Vivian's Night Garden,
2006, mixed media, 20 x 20 x 6 inches


Joan Bankemper, The Jester's Sojourn,
2005, mixed media, 21 x 20 x 7 inches
The artist's ceramic mosaic vessels grow out of 15 years of commitment to creating urban gardens with the help of surrounding communities. She has worked on projects in New York, Boston, Palermo, Italy and San Antonio, Texas, among others addressing the relationship of people to nature as reflected in the contemporary urban landscape. Her garden projects are not ordinary or formal gardens; they range from restorative healing herb gardens, to gardens based on the shape of the human body, to planting 600 giant sunflowers, which grow from the ruins of a Southern flour mill. For each of her garden projects, the artist worked within a conceptual framework, each a kind of sculpture in nature.

Nectar Gathering at Letúce, 2007, mixed media, 31 x 14 x 12 inches

Isabella's Night Garden, 2007, mixed media, 24 x 14 x 18 inches

Joan Bankemper, Trellis for the Lunar Eclipse, 2007, mixed media, 35 x 12 x 12 inches
Working in the way a collagist or assemblagist might, Bankemper creates monumental scale vessels, beginning with a simple glass vase at the core. She surrounds the glass vase with the shape of an urn, be it tall and graceful with elegant handles, or round and flat with a “canvas-like” field to cover. The ceramic urn that surrounds the glass is the vessel’s first “skin” which the artist builds and often breaks. She cements sections of the urn together leaving the cemented passages open and raw, yielding an artifact-like surface to the vessel. She then starts to dress and cloak the vessel with her vocabulary of images, words, molds, etc.

Joan Bankemper, Foraging in Park Hills, 2007, mixed media, 30 x 16 x 12 inches

Joan Bankemper, In Pod, 2006,
mixed media, 26 x 13 x 13 inches

Joan Bankemper, The Periwinkle Garden, 2007, mixed media, 28 x 13 x 14 inches
Casting from a collection of 1500 molds, the artist creates myriad shapes and sizes, animals and figurines; a yellow bird sits on the handle of a blue fish pitcher while a hand-built blue bird and a bevy of bees buzz around “In Pod,” a buttery yellow urn topped off with black decals of bees and words for the consummate cookie jar: cookies, pasta, sugar, coffee, tea, cookies again. Several birds bedeck the top of the urn, and many species of flowers create a garden at its bottom, all perched on an antique tureen base that becomes the foot of the vessel. Combining historical ceramics, contemporary china, hand-built objects, casting from molds that were made between 1958-1998, Bankemper creates an original tableau in ceramic. Everywhere the eye looks, there is something rich, textured and layered for the eye to behold. These are not simple pieces; they are complex tapestries of life.

At times her vessels revolve around a color, “In Pod” being a perfect example of such a piece. At other times her shard pottery vessels revolve around a narrative theme, the Madonna being a particular favorite for the artist. Bankemper’s Madonnas do not hold the religious sway of a classical Madonna and child. She views the Madonna as source and resource, a natural resource, an image of life, faith, strength and beauty. A Madonna’s head might be fused to a farm girl or boy’s body, or appear surrounded by birds, bees, flowers, and angels as a pagan goddess. Anything is possible in Bankemper’s hands.

Joan Bankemper was born in Covington, Kentucky in 1959. She received a B.F.A. from Kansas City Art Institute, Missouri and an M.F.A. from the Maryland Institute College of Art, Mount Royal Graduate School, Baltimore. She also attended Northern Kentucky University, Highland Heights and the California College of Arts and Crafts, Oakland.

Her work has been shown in many venues, most notably Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston, New Museum of Contemporary Art, New York, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, California and the Detroit Institute of Arts, Michigan. Her work has also been exhibited in many garden venues such as Wave Hill, Bronx, New York; Abington Art Center, Jenkinton, Pennsylvania as well as extensively in Italy.

The artist resides in New York City.

Studio Views 2006