B. Ingrid Olson's History Mother and Little Sister open at the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts
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B. Ingrid Olson's History Mother and Little Sister open at the Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts
B. Ingrid Olson, Equant and Run, with cartilage, 2017-20. Inkjet print and UV printed matboard in powder-coated aluminum frame. 30 1/2 x 34 x 1 1/4 inches (77 1/2 x 86 x 3 cm). Courtesy of the artist and i8 Gallery, Reykjavík.



CAMBRIDGE, MASS.- Carpenter Center for the Visual Arts is presenting two simultaneous solo exhibitions by artist B. Ingrid Olson: History Mother and Little Sister, each on a separate floor of the Center’s landmark Le Corbusier building. The exhibitions feature site-specific installations informed by a feminist engagement with experiences of doubling and mirroring, gendered forms, reciprocity between photography and sculpture, and ways the artist’s body and each viewer’s body relate to the built environment.

In the Carpenter Center’s Level 3 Sert Gallery, History Mother takes an unconventional approach to the “history” of Olson’s practice. A selection of photographic works from the past decade joins new works, together articulating how Olson uses her own body as subject matter—bent knees, limbs, hands, and feet press up against mirrors and photographic surfaces, confusing points of contact between the figure and the picture plane—as well as the archival impulse that runs through her practice, with collections of objects, images, and gestures often gathered, repeated, and rhymed across the assembled works. Alongside this photographic “retrospective,” Olson will show a new room-sized installation, Proto Coda, Index (2016–22), that choreographs the display of meticulously produced MDF reproductions of all of her sculptural reliefs made to date.

In Olson’s sculptural reliefs, a long-standing part of her practice, she employs carving (using a CNC machine that carves from sheets of wood or polyurethane foam, which she sands and paints by hand) and casting to create sculptural reliefs that evoke fragments of the human form in their measurements and symmetries. Her carved and cast objects convey both intimacy and distance, their physicality suggesting contact with both the artist’s body and with a machine. The sculptures themselves, cast from molds or carved from a design, go through a process of abstraction as details are softened and forms are reduced. With this new work, Proto Coda, Index, Olson creates another layer or abstraction as the specific texture and material identities of individual past works are flattened by their uniform reproduction in milled and sanded MDF, emphasizing their form—and bodily relations—above all else.




Meanwhile, Little Sister, presented in the Carpenter Center’s Level 1 Gallery, debuts an ambitious suite of new sculptures scaled to the building’s spaces, surfaces, and forms, and in critical conversation with its affects and ideological origins. In a variety of media, Olson distorts, inverts, repurposes, and frustrates the functions and metaphors of architectural elements, such as doors, windows, vestibules, light fixtures, and corridors. Sculptural details that suggest bodily anatomy and partially concealed photographs and ceramic sculptures join industrial materials and construction techniques in structures that populate Level 1’s indoor and outdoor gallery and public spaces.

Little Sister represents the first time Olson has created works at an architectural scale. Why does my vestibule hurt? (2021-22) riffs on the proportions and function of the Carpenter Center’s cubic glass and concrete vestibule. Olson’s sculpture resembles a revolving door, with display surfaces of radial aluminum structures on which are hung ceramic and mixed-media sculptures partially obscured by a set of facing walls. The sculptural light fixtures of What I would be if I wasn’t what I am appropriate and tweak the same highly evocative 1930s models (suggesting shells, flowers, architectural ornamentation, modernist restraint, animal anatomy, human genitals) that are installed in the Art Institute of Chicago’s Ryerson and Burnham Libraries, where Olson used to work. The artist has replaced all overhead lighting in the Level 1 Gallery and outdoor spaces with sculpturally modified versions of these fixtures.

Further, a sculpture incorporating swan eggs, Camera Swans Juliet (2020–22), recalls a kind of oblong camera facing walls of windows in two directions, made specifically to sit upon the permanent concrete benches in the space. Door Picture, a view in perspective arranged close together (2021–22) creates a claustrophobic corridor-like space that conceals and reveals photographic works featuring imagery of the artist’s body engaged in similar spatial contortions, withholdings, and disclosures. White Wall, painted for Gray (2022) alludes to a fraught episode between Le Corbusier and designer and architect Eileen Gray, and makes a quiet yet radical intervention into one of the building’s iconic architectural features.

B. Ingrid Olson was born in 1987 in Denver, Colorado. She lives and works in Chicago. In addition to her Carpenter Center exhibitions, Olson will open a solo show at Secession, Vienna in June 2022. Recent solo and two-person exhibitions include Fingered Eyed, i8 Gallery, Reykjavík (2019); Forehead and Brain, Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo (2018); Kiss the architect on the mouth, Simone Subal Gallery, New York (2018); and Klein / Olson, The Renaissance Society, Chicago (2017). Selected group exhibitions include Fata Morgana, Jeu de Paume, Paris (2022); The Inconstant World, Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (2021); Dependent Objects, The Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2021); New Visions: The Triennial for Photography and New Media, Henie Onstad Kunstsenter, Høvikodden, Norway (2020); Personal Private Public, Hauser & Wirth, New York (2019); Being: New Photography 2018, The Museum of Modern Art, New York (2018); and Lost Without Your Rhythm, Aspen Art Museum, Aspen (2018).











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