SEP 16—Nov 8

SARAH STEFANA SMITH

THRESHOLDS OF ACCUMULATION AND IMPERCEPTIBILITY

Sarah Stefana Smith. Detail of Asymmetries No. 5 or Symmetries/ Asymmetries No. 10, 2020. Mixed media on paper. Courtesy of the artist.

"I first encountered bird netting as a sculptural material while sitting on the porch of my high-rise apartment in East Toronto. Looking out my window, I noticed my neighbors would put bird netting on their balconies to keep pigeons from nesting there. This material—fine plastic netting that bunched and gathered—became not just a physical structure with which to make work but also a conceptual framework. So began years of inquiry into this material: a knotted grid, grotesque and beautiful, an explicit barrier used to keep species apart.” 

By manipulating ‘barrier materials’—including deer and bird netting, fiberglass screens, plastic webbing, and fishing nets—Sarah Stefana Smith explores how boundaries such as race, gender, and sexuality shape and define belonging. In the resulting wall objects, sculptural drawings, and installations, netting takes form as networks. Transformed through processes of mending and deconstruction, durable materials become malleable, connectivities emerge, and focal points blur.

In this exhibition, Smith explores the ecological implications of the plastics in these materials. Plastic takes on micro and macro forms, enveloping and entering the body; plastic waste chokes and constricts animal life; petroleum extraction damages the climate; islands of plastic trash form their own masses in the ocean. As the installation accumulates throughout the gallery, Smith’s sculptural forms also redefine and reshape our environment—barrier materials rupture, masses gather, and new networks take form.


This exhibition is curated by Lorenzo Conte, Gallery Director.

The artist is grateful to collaborators who have made this project possible: Alex Callender; colleagues at Mount Holyoke College, including Lisa Iglesias, Dixon Williams, and Amanda Maciuba; Studio and Research Assistants, including Steph Maldonado, Linh Ngoc Bui, and Lynise Thompson; and many others. Thank you.

The development of this project has been made possible by a Massachusetts Cultural Council Grant for Creative Individuals, supported by the Mass Cultural Council, a state agency.

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SARAH STEFANA SMITH

Sarah Stefana Smith (b. 1982, Brooklyn, New York, raised in Columbia, Maryland) aesthetically and critically contributes to discourses on Black culture, queer theory, affect studies, and visual and aesthetic representation. Smith's work has been exhibited or shown at the Arlington Art Center (VA), DC Art Center (Washington, D.C.), Borland Project Space Penn State (PA), Gallery CA (MD), Burlington City Arts (VT), Peeler Art Center, DePaul University (IN), and the twenty-year retrospective of A Different Eye: Sistagraphy Celebrates 20 Years of Photography, an Atlanta-based photography collective of African American women. They have published in The Black Scholar Journal, Women & Performance, Drain Journal of Art and Culture, The Palgrave Handbook of Race and the Arts Education, and in Ruptures: Anti-colonial and Anti-Racist Feminist Theorizing.

Smith has participated in numerous residencies, including Creativities Project, University of Pittsburgh, PA; Merriweather District AIR, Columbia, MD; 77 Arts, Rutland, VT; Virginia Center for the Creative Arts, Amherst, and the Vermont Studio Center. They received their PhD in Social Justice Education from the University of Toronto, Canada; an MFA in Interdisciplinary Art from Goddard College, VT; and a BA in Sociology and Anthropology from Spelman College, GA. Currently, Smith is an Assistant Professor of Gender Studies at Mount Holyoke College, MA, lecturing on gender and visual culture, transnational feminism, and Black art and culture.

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