Katie Stout: Verdant Malformations at Venus Over Manhattan

 

 

 

Katie Stout, Janet, 2021; Ceramic, bronze, glass, gold luster; 69 x 32 x 17 in (175.3 x 81.3 x 43.2 cm) Photos: Blaine Davis

Venus Over Manhattan will open its doors to Verdant Malformations, an exhibition of new works by Katie Stout on April 6th.

Stout’s sculptures, referencing the excessive detail of Giuseppe Arcimboldo’s still-life portraits and the dystopian visions of Hieronymus Bosch, evoke states of material decay and regeneration. Her over-ripe, perishing natural forms serve as memento mori, but also as a reminders of life’s resilience. Bold but delicate, Stout’s constructions advance her ongoing exploration of the female form as a site upon which our culture enacts its preoccupations with ornament, allure, and value.

Katie Stout, Title to Come, 2021, Ceramic, bronze, Glass, gold, luster.; 69 x 32 x 17 in (175.3 x 81.3 x 43.2 cm) Courtesy the artist and Venus Over Manhattan, New York. Photo: Blaine Davis

Throughout her career, Stout has continually redrawn conventional boundaries between art and design, using function as the starting point for exquisitely crafted sculptural works. For her first exhibition at Venus Over Manhattan, Stout has developed a new group of her iconic “Lady Lamps.” In this iteration, her intricately sculpted works are rendered in glass, ceramic, and bronze, elements introduced into the series for the first time.

Katie Stout, Title to Come, 2021, Ceramic, bronze, Glass, gold, luster.; 69 x 32 x 17 in (175.3 x 81.3 x 43.2 cm) Courtesy the artist and Venus Over Manhattan, New York. Photo: Blaine Davis

The “Lady Lamp” sculptures on view—figurative womanly depictions characterized by playful, provocative body positions that simultaneously convey animation and provide structural support—are representative of Stout’s broader practice. As with all of the artist’s work, the vibrantly colored objects on view at Venus Over Manhattan are inflected with both joy and degrees of pathos achieved through irregularity of form.

Katie Stout, Title to Come, 2021, Ceramic, bronze, Glass, gold, luster.; 69 x 32 x 17 in (175.3 x 81.3 x 43.2 cm) Courtesy the artist and Venus Over Manhattan, New York. Photo: Blaine Davis

Verdant Malformations will also debut new small-scale sculptures referred to by Stout as “wall jewelry” —accretions that commute the artist’s chosen materials of bronze and glass beyond the physical confines of her lamps, in order to engage the space around them.

Katie Stout, Title to Come, 2021, Ceramic, bronze, Glass, gold, luster.; 69 x 32 x 17 in (175.3 x 81.3 x 43.2 cm) Courtesy the artist and Venus Over Manhattan, New York. Photo: Blaine Davis

Katie Stout (b. 1989, Portland, ME) lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. She holds a BFA from the Rhode Island School of Design. She is at the forefront of a generational shift towards a maximalist, expressive mode in sculpture and design. In refusing to reside in one category, her work transcends the longstanding debate about the boundaries between art and design. In particular, Stout’s work reinforces her commitment to the centrality of craft in contemporary art.

Katie Stout, Title to Come, 2021, Ceramic, bronze, Glass, gold, luster.; 69 x 32 x 17 in (175.3 x 81.3 x 43.2 cm) Courtesy the artist and Venus Over Manhattan, New York. Photo: Blaine Davis

Regarded as one of the leading designers of her generation, Stout has exhibited her work at institutions including the Dallas Museum of Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art, Santa Barbara, and the Swiss Institute. Her work has featured in major group exhibitions, inluding recent presentations at Jeffrey Deitch, Tina Kim, Nina Johnson, Friedman Benda, and R & Company. She is represented by Nina Johnson and R & Company. Her work is held in the collections of the Dallas Museum of Art, Texas; Museum of Art and Design, New York; and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, California.

Katie Stout, Title to Come, 2021, Ceramic, bronze, Glass, gold, luster.; 69 x 32 x 17 in (175.3 x 81.3 x 43.2 cm) Courtesy the artist and Venus Over Manhattan, New York. Photo: Blaine Davis

Katie Stout: Verdant Malformations will be on view at Venus Over Manhattan, 120 East 65th Street, NYC, with opening on Tuesday, April 6, 2021. To ensure the health and safety of staff and visitors, masks and social distancing will be required in accordance with public guidelines. Maximum of six people admitted at a time.