Mimi Smith (artist)

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Mimi Smith (born May 13, 1942) is an American visual artist. She is a pioneer in early feminist and conceptual art focusing on clothing sculpture and drawing installation. She lives and works in New York City.

Early life and education[]

Born in Brookline Massachusetts, Smith spent her early years in Boston. In 1949, her family moved to Milton, Massachusetts where she grew up. She attended the Massachusetts College of Art and graduated with a BFA degree in 1963. In May of the same year, she moved to New York City. Smith enrolled in Rutgers University and received a MFA degree in 1966.

Artwork[]

Clothes sculptures[]

During her graduate studies at Rutgers, Mimi Smith began making sculpture that utilized clothing as both content and form. Smith’s early works were prescient of feminist and clothing art and predicted the feminist artists fascination with clothing as an extension of the body.[1] Using the autobiographical as a point of departure, her work often parallels everyday moments.[2] In 1965, she produced Recycle Coat, Model Dress and Bikini. These works were made of plastic, an important material for Smith. In 1966, she produced a room-size installation called The Wedding for her thesis show at Rutgers University. Designed as a plastic box that viewers were not permitted to enter, it contained a plastic wedding gown with a thirty-foot train. Within the next year she was to create her signature piece Steel Wool Peignoir.[3] About the piece Smith said, “Growing up in the 1950s, I associated peignoirs [with] storybook romance… steel wool, however, was the stuff of everyday life… I felt that [the materials] combined the reality of my life with the romance of what I thought it would be”.[4] That same year she made Maternity Dress and Girdle. These pieces were also prescient in their acknowledgment that fashion is part of what helps to construct women’s individual and social identities.[5] In 1968 Smith made a conceptual piece about her own pregnancy that played on the idea of knitting baby clothes. Knit Baby was conceived as a knit-your-own-baby kit, with instructions to enable any woman, or man, to knit themselves a baby.[6]

Knotted thread and tapemeasure drawings[]

Smith moved with her husband and two children from New York City to Cleveland, Ohio in the early 1970s. During this time, Smith created a series of wall drawings that replicated furniture, architectural features, and rooms in her home using knotted thread and tape measures to mark their precise dimensions.[6] With this series, Smith used the fundamental parameters of conceptual art to tell her own story. When exhibited, the individual works are arranged on gallery walls in a ghostly reproduction of the domestic sphere. In a review of Smith’s solo show at Kustera Tilton Gallery in 1999, art critic Roberta Smith wrote “These wall drawings combine elements of high conceptualism with instant accessibility and a feminist viewpoint”.[7]

Installation art and artist books[]

Smith and her family moved back to New York City in the mid 1970s. At this time, Smith’s work began to focus on installations and drawings about television news, the environment and nuclear threat. Installations ranged in size and included individual drawings hung directly on the wall to ten-foot tall paper houses suspended from the ceiling. These works often included audio of the artist reciting the daily news accompanied by her own phrases.[3][6] Simultaneously, she began making artists books and in 1983 she published This is a Test with Visual Studies Workshop. This is a Test was produced in an edition of 700 and deals with nuclear disaster told through television news.[8]

Recent clothes and drawings[]

From the 1990s to the present, Smith has returned to clothing sculpture[9][10] producing pieces that comment on the lives of women in the workplace and the military (Slave Ready Corporate, 1993, To Die For, 1991, and Camouflage Maternity Dress, 2004) as well as illness, the environment and aging (Protectors Against Illness, and Coverings for an Environmental Catastrophe). Continuing with her drawing practice, Smith’s ongoing series, Timelines[3] tracks the aging process of a woman through her clothes. Consisting of individual drawings displayed in a line, each Timeline depicts a specific article of clothing viewed from birth to seventy-nine, the average life expectancy of a woman.

Exhibitions, grants, writings[]

Mimi Smith has exhibited extensively throughout the United States and internationally. Her many exhibits include a retrospective ‘Steel Wool Politics’ at the ICA Philadelphia, a survey show at Ramapo College, NJ, and solo shows at Anna Kustera Gallery, NYC; Group shows ‘WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution’ at LA MOCA, ‘Building Blocks’ at RISD Museum, ‘Artwear’ at Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, ‘Addressing the Century, 100 Years of Art and Fashion’ at the Haywood Gallery, London, Committed to Print at MoMA, NYC, and at many other museums. She has been the recipient of grants from the National Endowment of the Arts, the New York Foundation on the Arts and the Joan Mitchell Foundation. Among the many publications that have written about her work are Artforum, Art in America, Art News, Frieze, and Time Out magazines, as well as The New York Times, Dallas Morning News, and several books.

Public collections[]

References[]

  1. ^ Lippard, Lucy (1995). The Pink Glass Swan. The New Press. pp. 17, 19. ISBN 9781565842137.
  2. ^ Harris, Jane (September 1998). "Clothing Art: Mimi Smith and the Fabric of Time". PAJ: A Journal of Performance and Art. 60 (3): 30–31.
  3. ^ Jump up to: a b c Earle, Susan (Spring–Summer 2011). "Mimi Smith Fashioning Art and LIfe". Woman's Art Journal. 32 (1): 13–21.
  4. ^ Felshin, Nina (Spring 1995). "Women's Work: A Lineage 1966-94". Art Journal. 54 (1): 72. doi:10.1080/00043249.1995.10791681.
  5. ^ Molesworth, Helen (May 1999). "Mimi Smith". Frieze. Frieze. Archived from the original on 2014-12-14. Retrieved 2015-12-21.
  6. ^ Jump up to: a b c Jacobs, Joseph (2004). Mimi Smith: Selected Works 1965 - 1999. Ramapo, NJ: Ramapo College. pp. 3–11.
  7. ^ Peipon, Corrina (2007). WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution. Los Angeles: The Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles ( L.A. MOCA). p. 303. ISBN 9780914357995. Archived from the original on 2014-06-05.
  8. ^ Wye, Deborah (1988). Committed to Print. New York: The Museum of Modern Art. p. 66. ISBN 9780870702990.
  9. ^ Tannenbaum, Judith (1994). Steel Wool Politics. Philadelphia: Institute of Contemporary Art Pennsylvania. p. 5. ISBN 9780884540731.
  10. ^ Jacobs, Joseph (2004). Mimi Smith: Selected Works 1965–1999. Ramapo, NJ: Ramapo College. pp. 3–11.

Further reading[]

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