FORMS OF FORMS OF FORMS

Exhibition by Lena Wolff

Artist Talk: August 4 @ 5:30pm

Exhibition: August 4 – September 30, First Fridays 5-10pm and by appointment

Local Language: 477 25th Street, Oakland CA 94612

View: @locallanguageart


ARTIST’S STATEMENT

Drawing from American folk-art and craft traditions, the work of Bay Area artist Lena Wolff is at once connected to histories of minimalism, Op art, feminist and political art. Forms of Forms of Forms presents new material and fabrication explorations made during her residency at Local Language, alongside drawings and collages from her studio and archives of her activism.

Longstanding correlations between quilts, democracy, craft, and civic engagement permeate Wolff’s practice. On site at Local Language, Wolff experimented with carved plaster drawings and layered low-relief wood sculptures based on the geometries of lyric quilt patterns that are the visual basis of much of her current work. Over the decades, the iconography of American quilts has evolved into a central focus of her studio activity, in which she regularly translates, repeats, and metamorphosizes quilt patterns into delicate pen drawings, collages made with hand-cut and painted papers, and large-scale wood sculptures in the shape of quilt forms. The patterns represent a visual language often shared between women, passed down for centuries and across communities in our nation’s fraught history, linking the past and the future, the personal and the political. Interwoven with a lexicon of ubiquitous quilt patterns, she often includes new symbols in her work that represent social justice, motifs from nature, queer culture, and the greater universe that is our home. When placed together, a kind of grammar is created, a layered narrative meaning, through the specific arrangements of multiple forms.

Together her work gives rise to an interplay of poetically related images – a call and response – emblematic of the interconnectedness of patterns in the universe, the natural world, and the ongoing pursuit of equality.  

ARTIST’S BIO

Lena Wolff is a visual artist, craftswoman, and activist for democracy who has lived and worked in the Bay Area since the early 1990s.  In recent years, in addition to her studio work in drawing, collage and wood sculpture, she generated several widely-visible projects that contribute to civic engagement, including an anti-hate poster campaign in the Bay Area and a public art initiative to boost voter participation that gained national reach in the past three election cycles in the US. Her work has been exhibited across the country and collected by ONE National Lesbian and Gay Archives, the Berkeley Art Museum, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, Oakland Museum of California, the San Francisco History Collection at San Francisco Public Library, San Francisco Arts Commission, Alameda County Arts Commission, Cleveland Clinic, University of Iowa Museum, and the Zuckerman Museum of Art, among others. She lives with her wife, artist, teacher, and illustrator, Miriam Klein Stahl and their daughter in the East Bay. On November 12, 2018, Mayor Jesse Arreguin named "Lena Wolff and Miriam Klein Stahl Day" in the city of Berkeley for their work that merges art and civic engagement.

Local Language is an Oakland-based creative studio that curates and creates custom artworks and large scale installations.  We are visual artists, art consultants, designers, and extraordinary makers – and the art collections we create tell the story of each community and location. We work with a network of independent artists in the Bay Area and beyond, placing local artists’ work in every project. 

Inside our studio art fabricators utilize high-tech digital tools and artisan craft techniques to print, paint, build, and create art. We create art collections for corporate, hospitality, healthcare, and residential environments around the world. Made in Oakland.

Our artist in residence and exhibitions program offers local artists space, expertise, and access to our digital technology and artisan craft expertise. Each artist works with our technicians to pursue their personal art practice utilizing experimental digital techniques and fabrication methods; culminating in solo exhibitions.