Catherine Opie

Catherine Opie (born 1961 in Sandusky, Ohio[1]) is an American fine-art photographer. She studies the relationships between mainstream and infrequent society, specializing in portraiture, studio, and landscape photography. Through photography Opie documents the connections between the individual and the space inhabited. She lives and works in West Adams, Los Angeles.[2] She is well known for her work of portraits exploring the Los Angeles leather-dyke community. Opie is currently a professor of photography at University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA).[3]

Life

Opie was influenced early in life by photographer Lewis Hine. At the age of nine she received a Kodak Instamatic camera, immediately capturing her family and community.[4] Opie spent her early childhood in Ohio,[5] but her family moved near San Diego when she was 13 years old.[6] She studied childhood education for a year as an undergraduate, but soon went to the San Francisco Art Institute to earn her bachelor of fine arts degree.[7] She completed a Masters of Fine Arts from the California Institute of the Arts in 1988. Her thesis project Master Plan (1986–88) examined the planned communities of Valencia, California, from construction sites and advertisement schemes, to homeowner regulations and the domestic interiors of residents' homes. In 1988 Opie moved to Los Angeles, California and began working as an artist, supported herself by accepting a job as a lab technician at the University of California, Irvine.[8] Opie and her companion, painter Julie Burleigh,[9] constructed working studios in the backyard of their home in South Central Los Angeles.[10]

Work

Dusty by Opie, 2007

Opie's work is characterized by a combination of formal concerns, a variety of printing technologies, references to art history, and social/political commentary. An example of formal concerns include addressing issues of the horizon line in the "ice house"[11] and "surfer" series. She has printed photographs using chromochrome, iris prints, Polaroids, and silver photogravure. Examples of art history references include the use of bright color backgrounds in portraits which reference the work of Hans Holbein[12] and the full body frontal portraits that reference August Sander. A common social/political theme in her work is the concept of community. Opie has investigated aspects of community, making portraits of many groups including LGBT community; surfers; and most recently high school football players. Opie is interested in how identities are shaped by our surrounding architecture. Her work is informed by her identity as an out lesbian.[13] Her works balance personal and political. Her assertive portraits bring queers to a forefront that is normally silenced by societal norms.

At the Hammer Museum, Opie was on the first Artist Council (a series of sessions with curators and museum administrators) and served on the board of overseers.[14] Along with fellow artists John Baldessari, Barbara Kruger and Ed Ruscha, Opie served as member of the board of the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. In 2012, she and the others resigned; however, they joined the museum's 14-member search committee for a new director after Jeffrey Deitch's resignation in 2013.[15] Opie returned in support of the museum's new director, Philippe Vergne, in 2014.[16]

Opie collaborated with filmmaker Lisa Udelson on a 2011 documentary, Same Difference, showing how the inability of their parents to marry affected children of same-sex couples. In 2013, she created Edie, a photographic portrait of Edith Windsor, whose lawsuit figured in the 2013 Supreme Court decision on United States v. Windsor.[17]

Along with Richard Hawkins, Opie curated a selection of work by the late artist Tony Greene at the 2014 Whitney Biennial in New York.[18]

Publications

Exhibitions

Awards

References

  1. http://www.regenprojects.com/artists/catherine-opie/bio/
  2. Steve Appleford (January 27, 2013), Catherine Opie's documentary photography is on display Los Angeles Times.
  3. "Catherine Opie - Professor, Photography". UCLA Official website. Retrieved 30 November 2010.
  4. "Catherine Opie: American Photographer". Guggenheim. The Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  5. Liesl Bradner (August 21, 2010), Football and art collide at LACMA Los Angeles Times.
  6. Hilarie M. Sheets (January 27, 2013), Home Views, Bound by Ice or Leather New York Times.
  7. Hilarie M. Sheets (January 27, 2013), Home Views, Bound by Ice or Leather New York Times.
  8. Catherine Opie: American Photographer, September 26, 2008 – January 7, 2009 Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York.
  9. Lisa Boone (April 12, 2013), Garden is her canvas, flowers and edibles (and chickens) her paint Los Angeles Times.
  10. Hilarie M. Sheets (January 27, 2013), Home Views, Bound by Ice or Leather New York Times.
  11. Minneapolis Institute of Art. "Untitled #14 (Icehouses)". Minneapolis Institute of Art. Retrieved 24 August 2015.
  12. Hilarie M. Sheets (January 27, 2013), Home Views, Bound by Ice or Leather New York Times.
  13. http://archive.is/20120717013454/http://www.afterellen.com/blog/trishbendix/catherine-opie-gives-us-girlfriends
  14. Susan Emerling (April 19, 2009), The Hammer Museum gets together with artists, outside the box Los Angeles Times.
  15. Mike Boehm (September 24, 2013), MOCA adds artists who resigned from board to its director search team Los Angeles Times.
  16. Mike Boehm and Deborah Vankin (March 19, 2014), Artists return to MOCA board Los Angeles Times.
  17. Mike Boehm (June 27, 2015), Supreme Court's gay marriage decision sparks art world jubilation Los Angeles Times.
  18. David Ng (November 15, 2013), Whitney Biennial 2014 to include L.A. artists, David Foster Wallace Los Angeles Times.
  19. Forester, Ian (3 March 2015). "Catherine Opie: Cleveland Clinic" (Video). Art21. Art21 Annual Fund Contributors. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  20. ICA. "Catherine Opie" (Web). Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston. Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation, Mark and Marie Schwartz, the Barbara Lee Family Foundation, Sandy and Les Nanberg, and Regen Projects. Retrieved 7 March 2015.
  21. Mike Boehm (October 26, 2010), Herb Alpert-funded awards will pay five artists $75,000 each Los Angeles Times.
  22. Regen Projects, Catherine Opie. "Biography". Regen Projects. Retrieved 2012-11-26.

External links

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