Kira Lynn Harris
Kira Lynn Harris (1963–2024) was an African-American mixed-media artist lived and worked in New York City.[1] LifeKira Lynn Harris was born in 1963 in Los Angeles, California and died in 2024 in New York City, aged 61 years old. Harris received her BA in Studio Art from the University of California at Santa Cruz, and then earned her MFA in Art from the California Institute of the Arts in 1998. CareerIn addition to multiple solo and group exhibitions in the United States, Italy, Canada, and South Africa, Harris also served as an artist-in-residence at the Studio Museum in Harlem (2001–2002), the Center for Photography at Woodstock (2004), St. Mary's College of Maryland (2005), Omi International Art Center, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, and the Delaware Center for Contemporary Art (2006).[2] Her work has been exhibited at many galleries, including MoMA PS1, Miami Art Museum, Bruno Marina Gallery, and the Delaware Center for the Contemporary Arts.[3][4] She has participated in the following group exhibitions: Blues for Smoke (MoCA and Whitney Museum), Black Light (White Noise Contemporary Art Museum and Freestyle Studio Museum Harlem).[5] Her work has been reviewed in The New York Times, Time Out New York, and the Los Angeles Times, among others.[6][7] Critics have described her work as "minimal," making use of installation, drawing, photography, and video to express "formal concerns of space, light and the phenomenological with issues of individual subjectivity."[8][9] She has also made use of reflective surfaces like mirror or silver leaf to highlight the architecture of space.[10] Of her work, Harris explains, "My projects often provide a disorienting encounter for the viewer: in my installations I am concerned with destabilization and re-orientation. To achieve this I often create architectural and environmental interventions – by using light and reflective surfaces; by inverting subject and object or figure and ground; and/or by reversing up and down, exterior and interior."[11] Harris stated that her work was influenced by artists like James Turrell, Mark Rothko, and the Hudson River School painters. She also explained, "A lot of my interest in light came from being from Los Angeles, where the light is just everywhere. You have these huge expanses of sky".[12] She has also cited science fiction, as well as films and cityscapes like Metropolis and Mad Max as influences.[13] Works
Prizes and awardsIn 1998 Harris won the Lorser Feitelson Emerging Artist award. In 2003 she won the Harvestworks artist-in-residence video production grant.[18] Personal lifeHarris lived in New York City, New York and taught art to both high schoolers and college students. She was an assistant professor in the Department of Art and Music at John Jay College, as well as a part of the Art Faculty at Nightingale-Bamford School.[19][20] References
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