Indepth Arts News:
"Lisa Sanditz: Flyover"
2006-10-06 until 2007-01-07
Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art
Kansas City, MO,
USA
New York-based painter Lisa Sanditz creates exuberant and engaging landscapes that mix the homespun aesthetic of folk art with the calculated gestures of postmodernist painting and celebrates places the artist calls “underappreciated and underexplored.” Sanditz explores the dynamic between the natural and artificial experience of the environment in the exhibition Lisa Sanditz: Flyover, on view October 6, 2006–January 7, 2007 at the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art in Kansas City, Missouri.
Sanditz is a visiting artist at the Kemper Museum, and this is her first solo museum exhibition.
In her paintings, Lisa Sanditz delves into the spaces and places found in the “flyover zone,” particularly those places outside the East and West Coasts and off the beaten path. From the natural wonder of the Meramec caves found outside of St. Louis and Tennessee’s Smoky Mountains to the architectural feats of Buckminster Fuller and Samuel Mockbee, and even a housing subdivisions based on the paintings of Thomas Kinkade, Sanditz’s landscapes combine elements of nostalgia with social commentary about consumerist habits and big-city attitudes.
Sanditz uses bright and bold colors and a style reminiscent of outsider and folk artists to create her depictions of popular destinations, including Dolly’s Peaks—named after hometown entertainer Dolly Parton—in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee. Mass commercialization and natural scenery collide in a quirky, colorful mix of casinos, shopping centers, and planned-living communities. While her works are devoid of people, Sanditz leaves visual reminders of human activity, including abandoned cars, buildings, and telephone lines.
Born in 1973 in St. Louis, Missouri (part of the flyover zone), Lisa Sanditz lives and works in New York City and Tivoli, New York. She received her BA in studio art from Macalester College, St. Paul, Minnesota, in 1995 and her MFA from Pratt Institute, New York, in 2001. Her work has been included in group exhibitions at the Orange County Museum of Art, Orange County, California; the International Print Center, New York; and the Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, Ohio, among many other venues.
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