Erica Lord
Erica Lord | |
---|---|
Born | Nenana, Alaska |
Nationality | American |
Known for | Performance art, photography |
Notable work |
|
Website | ericalord.com |
Erica Lord is an interdisciplinary artist of Athabascian, Iñupiaq, Finnish, Swedish, English and Japanese heritage.[1] Working in the forms of performance, film, photography and installation, Lord's work addresses history, identity, home, and diaspora.[2]
Life
Lord was raised traveling between her father's village in Nenana, Alaska and her mother's home community in Michigan.[1] Her personal experience perpetually moving between various geographic places inspires her work's interest in themes of displacement, cultural identity and cultural limbo.[2]
She received a B.A. in liberal and studio arts from Carleton College in 2001 and completed her MFA at The School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2006.[3]
Career
Erica Lord has exhibited her work in solo exhibitions at the DeVos Museum of Art ( Marquette, MI) and the Alaska Native Arts Foundation Gallery (Anchorage, AK), as well as in group exhibitions such as the Havana Biennial and the Museum of Contemporary Native American Art.[4]
Notable exhibitions
- 2010, Dry Ice, Museum of Contemporary Native American Art, Santa Fe, NM[4]
- 2009, BadLand, Institute of American Indian Arts Museum, Santa Fe, NM[5]
- 2007, Off the Map: Landscape and the Native Imagination, Smithsonian Institution National Museum of the American Indian, New York, NY[6]
Works
- Un/Defined Self-Portrait Series (2005), C-prints of variable dimension
- (Untitled) I Tan To Look More Native (2006), Digital Inkjet, variable dimensions
- Artifact Piece, Revisited, (2009), performance and mixed media installation
References
- ^ a b Museum of Contemporary Native Arts. (2011). New Native art criticism : manifestations / Museum of Contemporary Native Arts. Santa Fe, NM: Museum of Contemporary Native Arts. pp. 132–133. ISBN 9780615489049.
- ^ a b "home page". Erica Lord. Erica Lord. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
- ^ Lord, Erica (2009). Williams, Maria Sháa Tláa (ed.). The Alaska Native Reader: History, Culture, Politics. Duke University Press Books. p. 340.
- ^ a b "Erica Lord C.V." Erica Lord. Retrieved 8 March 2015.
- ^ Fairfield, Douglas (10 July 2009). "ART IN REVIEW". The Santa Fe New Mexican.
- ^ "Native Artists Challenge Landscape Traditions in 'Off the Map'". Seminole Tribune. 8 March 2015.