Rosen's artwork is largely text-based, employing "formalism, linguistics, and humor to reveal content that is hidden within both the structural nature of written language and the ways in which meaning can be generated through the manipulation of text."[1] Rosen is interested in expressing language visually, and ss focuses primarily on wordplay.[5] Many of her works are representations of words in which certain letters have been juxtaposed or rendered in different colors or scales in order to reveal hidden messages or to draw attention to the relationship between language and meaning.[6] These features of Rosen's style, known as word art[7] can be seen in Untitled Grid[8] at the Indianapolis Museum of Art and in The Whitney Museum of American Art'sSpare Parts.[9]
In some works, language becomes structure, "with words and letter-forms functioning as building blocks, and where, through unusual typographic arrangements, words and phrases can embody the thing they are describing".[1] Her precisionist-style works span in size from mural- to laptop-sized.[10][11] Rosen's work frequently veers into commentary on the U.S. political condition, often deploying wit and humor.[12][13]
Exhibitions
In addition to works created for gallery spaces, Rosen is known for publicly presenting work in the form of outdoor murals.[14] The piece "Blurred" was exhibited along Interstate 70 as a part of the I-70 Sign Show. It was first located near Hatton, Missouri then moved to Warrenton, Missouri. The blurring of colors in text were interpreted as a statement related to political divides between Missouri's rural and urban populations.[15]Blurred (2004) [16] is currently in the collection at the Art Gallery of New South Wales.
Solo exhibitions of Rosen's work have been presented at the following museums and nonprofit art institutions:[17]
Witte de With (Center for Contemporary Art), Rotterdam, The Netherlands (1990)
Indianapolis Museum of Art (1994)
Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (1994)
Unlimited Contemporary Art, Athens, Greece (1996)
M.I.T. List Visual Arts Center, Cambridge, Massachusetts (1997)
Beaver College Art Gallery (now Arcadia University), Philadelphia (1998)
^"ROSEN, Kay."Benezit Dictionary of Artists. Oxford Art Online. Oxford University Press, accessed March 30, 2014.
^ abPagel, David. Why Paint?: Judy Ledgerwood, Jim Lutes, Kay Rosen [and] Kevin Wolff: the Renaissance Society at the University of Chicago, March 22-April 26, 1992. Chicago: The Society, 1992.
^Rosen, Kay. Kaysays: Essays and Interviews by Kay Rosen. Chicago: Sara Ranchouse Publishing, 2007.
^Rosen, Kay. "Publish to Flourish." Art in America. October 2014, Vol. 102 Issue 9, p. 128-129.
^Sholis, Brian. "Kay Rosen." Artforum International. September 2005, Vol. 44 Issue 1, p. 307.