Elaine Reichek
Biography
Elaine Reichek is a conceptual artist who uses embroidery to explore aesthetics in art. Born in New York, she received a B.F.A. from Yale University and a B.A. from Brooklyn College. She has exhibited extensively in the United States and abroad, including the Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY, Wexner Center for the Visual Arts, Columbus, OH, Palais des Beaux-Arts, Belgium, the Irish Museum of Modern Art, and Tel Aviv Art Museum, Israel. She lives in New York City.
A virtual exhibition developed by Reichek for the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, Boston can be accessed here.
Feminist Artist Statement
My beginnings as an artist are in painting—I studied with Ad Reinhardt, who had a big influence on me, and I got an MFA from Yale as a painter. But I began very early to take a critical view of the kind of work, and the kind of role as an artist, that I was being trained to take on, and I decided to explore other media. For some years now I’ve worked mostly in needle and thread, making embroideries on linen, sometimes on quite a large scale for those materials. In the past I’ve also worked by knitting wool, by hand-painting found photographs, by conceiving installations, and in other ways, but embroidery is my current concentration—although I often combine it with installation and other media. For a long time I’ve designed my embroideries by using a computer to do some of the prep work; lately I’ve begun exploring possibilities actually based on the computer, doing a website and a cd and embroidering with a computerized sewing machine. The idea of using the computer isn’t incidental to my work, it’s not just a technical shortcut; it’s part of the work’s hybrid character. None of these ideas ever really leave me.
Translation is not only a basic process for me—I’m always translating information from one form into another—but it’s also a basic interest of mine. In retrospect, I realize that translation has been a constant in my work. In the ’80s, I was remaking different kinds of architecture in knitting, or as knitting patterns—I wanted to see how these buildings and dwellings changed meaning when they were realized in a radically different medium. Part of that desire, I think, has to do with aesthetic politics: when I was growing up and was a student, painting was the dominant art form, really the center of a cult, and the members of that cult were historically mostly male—there was very little room for women there. And I have to say I love painting, but I also feel, what’s the big deal? I can make these same images using knitting, using embroidery—using media traditionally associated with women. But if I make them that way, of course their meaning changes, since the meaning of an artwork is always bound up with its media and processes and their history. Following through those changing meanings is one of the basic pursuits in my work.
Translation is not only a basic process for me—I’m always translating information from one form into another—but it’s also a basic interest of mine. In retrospect, I realize that translation has been a constant in my work. In the ’80s, I was remaking different kinds of architecture in knitting, or as knitting patterns—I wanted to see how these buildings and dwellings changed meaning when they were realized in a radically different medium. Part of that desire, I think, has to do with aesthetic politics: when I was growing up and was a student, painting was the dominant art form, really the center of a cult, and the members of that cult were historically mostly male—there was very little room for women there. And I have to say I love painting, but I also feel, what’s the big deal? I can make these same images using knitting, using embroidery—using media traditionally associated with women. But if I make them that way, of course their meaning changes, since the meaning of an artwork is always bound up with its media and processes and their history. Following through those changing meanings is one of the basic pursuits in my work.
Eastern Parkway/Brooklyn Museum