A.K. Burns (née Aisha Khalilah Burnes; 1975, Capitola, California) is a New York-based interdisciplinary artist and educator working with video, installation, sculpture, drawing-collage, writing and collaboration. Working through a trans-feminist lens Burns explores the nexus of language and materiality. Her artwork troubles hegemonic systems and their impact on gender, labor, ecology and sexuality.[1] A.K. Burns is an Associate Professor and MFA Co-Director at Hunter College,[2] Department of Art & Art History. Burns is a 2023 Berlin Prize Fellow[3] at the American Academy in Berlin and a 2021 Guggenheim Fellow[4] in Fine Art. Burns has works in several public collections including the Museum of Modern Art[5] and Whitney Museum of American Art.[6] Burns is currently represented by Michel Rein Gallery,[7] Paris/Brussels, and Video Data Bank,[8] Chicago. Burns is gender non-conforming and has no preferred pronoun.

A.K. Burns
Born1975
Capitola, CA
EducationRhode Island School of Design Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts at Bard College
AwardsGuggenheim Fellowship, Berlin Prize, NYSCA/NYFA Fellowship, Radcliffe Fellowship, American Academy of Arts and Letters, Creative Capital Foundation
Websitehttps://akburns.net/

Early life and career

edit

Burns was born in Capitola, California in 1975 to Sisene Strehl  (née Sisene Bunn) and Peter Burnes. Strehl left home at the age of sixteen and met Burnes a few years later in Santa Cruz, CA. The couple married in 1975 in a wedding ceremony officiated by a Sikh priest in a redwood forest and divorced when Burns was three years old, both remarrying subsequently. Burnes later worked at Stanford University as an environmental health and safety specialist. Strehl held various odd jobs including working as a house cleaner, the night shift at a laser manufacturer, teaching ESL and later joined a non-classroom-based public charter school, founded to support homeschooling where she worked as a librarian and college counselor. Burns has five half-siblings from her mother’s second and third marriages. Burns received an alternative upbringing in the South Bay Area, moving between her father’s home in Palo Alto and her mother’s home in Mountain View. When Burns was 14, her mother relocated to San Andreas, CA due to the financial strain of raising a large family.

As a child, Burns was deeply influenced in becoming an artist by the time she spent painting with her grandmother, Cecine Bunn Stadden. Burns attended Henry M. Gunn High School in Palo Alto, and Rhode Island School of Design, where she graduated in 1998 with a degree in Graphic Design. After college, Burns moved to Oakland, CA where she started her own design business and studio, Tumbleweed, at the age of 23, that specialized in graphics for arts organizations, books and non-profits. In 2001 she started a gallery project called Ego Park[9] out of the same space Tumbleweed was located in Oakland with artist Kevin Slagle.[10]

Early work

edit

Burns moved to New York City in 2003, where she was introduced to the collective Lesbians to the Rescue (LTTR) through former partner Lanka Tattersall.[11] Burns worked closely with LTTR both as a graphic designer for the publication and as a contributing artist. The expansive community of queer artists Burns met through LTTR were formative for Burns’ later collaborations. In 2007 Burns began her MFA in Sculpture at Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts at Bard College. On the first day of classes at Bard, Burns met her future wife Katherine Hubbard who was pursuing her MFA in Photography. Burns and Hubbard would go on to collaborate on many projects beginning with The Brown Bear: Neither Particular nor General, a performance that intentionally conflated the hair and art salon as a site for public engagement developed through a residency at Recess in 2010,[12] and The Poetry Parade, a thematic migrating feminist literary intervention that took place within the collections of public art museums at Museum of Modern Art in 2012[13] and the Whitney Museum of American Art in 2015.[14] Burns’ time at Bard resulted in a series of other pivotal collaborations. In 2009, Burns co-founded Randy Magazine with Swedish photographer, gallerist and publisher Sophie Mörner. Randy was a publishing and curatorial project that brought together trans-feminist perspectives celebrating the politics of art, sexuality and aesthetics. Randy issues were compiled in 2016 in the book Randy 2010-2013, published by Capricious Publishing.[15]

Working Artist and the Greater Economy (W.A.G.E.)

edit

In 2008, Burns co-founded W.A.G.E., an artists’ advocacy organization established to support equitable fiscal relations between artists and the arts institutions that hire them. The organization’s first public speeches were delivered at the Park Avenue Armory on the occasion of the Democracy Now Creative Time Summit in 2008.  In 2012 as W.A.G.E. evolved from an activist collective to a 501 c-3 Non-profit organization that certifies arts organizations nationally, Burns transitioned from core organizer to board member, ultimately leaving W.A.G.E. in 2015 to focus on pursuing teaching and her art career.[16]

Community Action Center (2010)

edit

During her first year as an MFA student at Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts at Bard College, Burns began collaborating with A.L. Steiner on W.A.G.E. and Community Action Center,[17] a single channel video project that archives an inter-generational community built on collaboration, friendship, sex and art. Inspired by gay porn-romance-liberation films of the 60s’ and 70s’, the work reexamines how sex and sexuality is imaged and imagined for marginalized bodies—in particular for women, trans and non-binary persons. The work features many friends and long-time collaborators of Burns’ and Steiner’s including: Eileen Myles, Ashland Mines, and Wu Tsang. Completed in 2010, Community Action Center was ranked no.20 in The 25 Works of Art That Define the Contemporary Age” by the New York Times in 2019[18] as well as ranked no. 18 in “The 100 Works of Art That Defined the Decade” by Artnet in 2020.[19] The zine Cliff Notes on Community Action Center was published alongside the film in 2010 by Taxter & Spengemann and Horton Gallery, which included an original essay by Litia Perta, and excerpts from various media and texts that inspired the piece including work by Monique Wittig, Jack Smith, Angela Carter, Audre Lorde, Jean Genet and others.[20] Community Action Center is held in the public collections at MoMA,[21] and Julia Stoschek Foundation, and is distributed by Video Data Bank[17] in Chicago, IL.

Recent work

edit

2012 marked a turning point in Burns' practice from working primarily through collaborative projects, arts organization and graphic design to a more public practice as a studio artist and educator. During this period Burns began refining her perspective as a sculpture, video artist, researcher and writer. Burns' work orients around formal and material inquiry into the relationship between ecological, social and political structures, with particular interest in themes concerning economic hierarchies, environment and ecology, animacy, and gender and sexuality. In her work, Burns experiments with linguistic and material metaphors to consider how hierarchies of power manifest in language and sociality.

Sculpture and wall works

edit

Burns’ sculptures often feature industrial materials including sandblasted and powder-coated steel and processes that explore the poetics of decay, destruction and rebirth. In the series The Dispossessed (2018), commissioned by FRONT International: Triennial for Contemporary Art, and Known/Unknown (2016), the artist critically explores confinement and borders by bending and inserting text into fences. Since 2017 Burns’ has been producing sculptures for her Depleted Figures series, where she bends steel remesh and rebar into figure-like shapes that appear almost like line drawings in space. Each figure includes only the extremities—hands and/or feet— rendered either literally in concrete or more abstractly through cast and ready-made household objects. As figures they lack a wholeness or true body, only the skeletal understructure remains. These works represent exhaustive bodily conditions where labor (as in, birth and the workforce) are treated as an extractive resource in late capitalism. Burns also produces collages, photographs and sculptural reliefs. In her Disturbed Mirror series (2019-2023), Burns punctures and punctuates hand-ladled glass with various materials. The glass is then coated with silver-nitrate— a material traditionally applied to thin sheets of glass to create the reflective surface of mirrors. These mirrored reliefs are created through an interaction between molten glass and materials that combust (such as leather gloves, old jeans, rope, pine cones, and paper bags) leaving a ghostly imprint. Carbon from the combustion and materials such as copper, rocks, and sand tolerate the extreme heat and become embedded in the glass. Transforming beyond their function as a reflection for the narcissistic gaze of humanism, these mirrors instead illuminate the tension of an interior cosmology of material life.[22]

Audio-video installations

edit

Burns often installs video and audio components into her exhibitions as well as creating stand alone video installations. These works involve extensive research and collaboration, and explore interconnected themes including ecology, sexuality, institutions and power. Burns considers audio-video works to be time-based sculptures, installing works to interact with the exhibition environment in specific ways. This is one of many tactics Burns uses to draw attention to perceptual and experiential experience of the viewer and therefore often intervenes in exhibition environments to query preconceived notions about architecture and built environs, the hierarchies of information and perception the viewer may experience.[8]

Video projects include Touch Parade (2011), a 5-channel installation that explores fetish culture and the assimilation of marginalized sexuality on the Internet, Survivor’s Remorse (2018), a 9-channel installation commissioned by the Harvard Art Museums that takes the life and art of David Wojnarowicz as a point of departure to examine the unequal distribution of value between artists’ living bodies and the bodies of work they produce,[23] and Untitled (eclipse) (2019), a silent 16mm film shot in Nebraska during the total solar eclipse in 2017.[24] This work is often installed with the Leave No Trace vinyl record, an interactive soundtrack for the piece. This record has also been displayed alone, or with a poem also titled Leave No Trace that Burns displays by CNC routering the text into the surface of the walls of the exhibition space.[25]

Negative Space (2015-2023)

edit

Working over a decade Burns completed Negative Space, a series of multi-channel video installations that compose a four-part epic, in 2023. Through a process of conjuring and deconstructing science fiction tropes, the work interrogates anthropocentric inclinations, proposing that in changing perception--how we define, know, and organize life-- lies the potential to alter our world building. Each video is a non-linear and poetic work structured around a physical system: void, body, land and water, respectively.[26] The opening episode, A Smeary Spot, was produced with support from the Creative Capital Foundation Visual Arts Award and debuted at Participant Inc., NY in 2015. The second episode, Living Room, debuted in 2017 at the New Museum, NY, when Burns was an Artist-in-Residence, New Museum Spring 2017 Research and Development Season.  In 2019 the third work, Leave No Trace, premiered at the Julia Stoschek Collection in Dusseldorf, Germany, produced with the support of EMPAC at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York. The final episode, What is Perverse is Liquid, debuted at The Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, OH in 2019, produced with the support of the Guggenheim Foundation when Burns was Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts in 2021.These installations raise questions about the relationship between land use, environmental fragility, historical narratives, and the systemic production of marginalized experiences. Negative Space features performers from Burns’ community of artists, choreographers, and musicians including: Will Rawls, Keyon Gaskin, Shannon Funches, Savannah Knoop, Nic Kay, Naylnd Blake, Jen Rosenblit, Niv Acosta, Clara Lopez Menendez, Marcelo Gutierrez, Lee Relvas, Monica Mirabile, Marbles Jumbo Radio, A.L. Steiner and others. Each work is scored by the artist Geo Wyeth. The completed work was exhibited as part of a survey exhibition, “Of space we are…," at the Wexner Center for the Arts, Ohio State University, Columbus, OH in 2023.[26] Dancing Foxes Press and the Wexner Center for the Arts co-published the monograph, A.K. Burns: Negative Space, with the exhibition.[27] The book includes texts by CA Conrad, Mel Y. Chen, Aruna D’Souza, Megan Hicks, Simone White, as well as a conversation between A.K. Burns and Karen Archey.

Writing and publications

edit
  • A.K. Burns: Negative Space[27]
    • Monograph published following the completion of the four part science fiction video epic, Negative Space, and on the occasion of the work’s first complete exhibition in “Of space we are…” at Wexner Center for the Arts at The Ohio State University in Columbus, OH. Includes texts by CA Conrad, Mel Y. Chen, Aruna D’Souza, Megan Hicks, Simone White, as well as a conversation between A.K. Burns and Karen Archey. Edited by Karen Kelly and Barbara Schroeder, and published by Dancing Foxes Press, Brooklyn, NY and Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, OH. Published 2023.
  • Zero: A.K. Burns on Nancy Holt[28]
    • This book is based on a lecture about Nancy Holt originally presented at Dia Art Foundation’s Artists on Artists Lecture Series, Dia:Chelsea, New York, on November 27, 2018. Burns read a text alongside a performative slideshow, which was later published as a book by Callicoon Fine Arts. Published 2019.
  • Randy Zine and Book[15]
    • Initiated in 2009 as a publishing and curatorial project, Randy produced four issues. Clark Solack Burns and Sophie Morner for Issue 3 and 4 as co-editor. Randy was an intentionally irregular trans-feminist project celebrating the politics of art, sexuality and aesthetics. Randy 2010-2013, a compendium publication of all four issues, published in 2016. Randy was published by Capricious Publishing.
  • Community Action Center Zine[29]
    • Printed in conjunction with the release of the feature-film Community Action Center. Includes essay by Litia Perta, edited and assembled with A.L. Steiner.
  • Burns has published writing in publications such as Out Magazine, Photoworks: Photography, Art, Visual Culture, and ARTFORUM, and contributed essays to publications including Taylor Davis: One Day at a Time published by Arbor Press, and The Little Joe Club House Reader edited by David Edgar & Sam Ashby and published by Ditto Press.

Awards and fellowships

edit
  • 2023: Berlin Prize, Fellow at the American Academy, Berlin, Germany[3]
  • 2021: Guggenheim Fellow in Fine Arts, New York, NY;[4] American Academy of Arts and Letters, Art Awards Purchase Program, New York, NY[30]
  • 2018: NYSCA/NYFA Fellow in Interdisciplinary Art[31]
  • 2017: BMW Art Journey Award Shortlist, Art Basel Miami, Miami, FL;[32] EMPAC Commission & Residency, Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, Troy, New York;[33] Artist-in-Residence, New Museum Spring 2017 Research and Development Season, New York, NY[34]
  • 2016: Radcliffe Fellow, at Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Studies at Harvard University, Cambridge, MA[35]
  • 2015: Creative Capital Foundation Visual Arts Award, New York, NY[36]
  • 2011: Residency, Fire Island Artists Residency, Cherry Grove, FI, NY[37]
  • 2010: Artist-in-Residence, Recess Activities Inc., New York, NY[12]

References

edit
  1. ^ "About/Contact – A.K. Burns Studio". akburns.net. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  2. ^ "A.K. Burns". Hunter MFA in Studio Art. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  3. ^ a b "A.K. Burns". American Academy in Berlin. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  4. ^ a b "A.K. Burns – John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation…". Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  5. ^ "A.K. Burns American, born 1975". MoMA.
  6. ^ "A.K. Burns". whitney.org. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  7. ^ "A.K. Burns | Artist | Michel Rein". Michel Rein, i.e. Moz. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  8. ^ a b "A.K. Burns". www.vdb.org. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  9. ^ "ARTISTS". egopark.org. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  10. ^ Yerba Buena Center for the Arts (2006-11-07). Oakland East Side Story Exhibition - Kevin Slagle. Retrieved 2024-09-28 – via YouTube.
  11. ^ "Thumb War | Video Data Bank". www.vdb.org. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  12. ^ a b "The Brown Bear: Neither Particular, Nor General". Recess. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  13. ^ "The Poetry Parade… – A.K. Burns Studio". akburns.net. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  14. ^ "Poetry Parade for Site and Sight". whitney.org. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  15. ^ a b "A.K. Burns and Sophie Morner (Editors): RANDY 2010-2013". shop.oogaboogastore.com. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  16. ^ "Working Artists and the Greater Economy". W◼A◼G◼E◼. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  17. ^ a b "Community Action Center | Video Data Bank". www.vdb.org. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  18. ^ "The 25 Works of Art That Define the Contemporary Age". The New York Times.
  19. ^ Article, Ben Davis ShareShare This (2020-01-01). "The 100 Works of Art That Defined the Decade, Ranked: Part 4". Artnet News. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  20. ^ "Cliffs Notes: Community Action Center - A.L. Steiner". www.hellomynameissteiner.com. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  21. ^ "A.L. Steiner, A.K. Burns Community Action Center 2010".
  22. ^ "The Leak – A.K. Burns Studio". akburns.net. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  23. ^ Harvard. "Exhibitions, A.K. Burns: Survivor's Remorse | Harvard Art Museums". harvardartmuseums.org. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  24. ^ "A.K. Burns | Untitled (Eclipse)". whitney.org. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  25. ^ "Leave No Trace (record) – A.K. Burns Studio". akburns.net. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  26. ^ a b "A.K. Burns: Of space we are... | Wexner Center for the Arts". wexarts.org. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  27. ^ a b "A.K. Burns: Negative Space". Dancing Foxes Press. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  28. ^ "A.K. Burns: Zero: A.K. Burns on Nancy Holt — Artbook Bookstores". artbookstores.com. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  29. ^ "Community Action Center Zine – A.K. Burns Studio". akburns.net. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  30. ^ "All Awards". American Academy of Arts and Letters. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  31. ^ "Introducing | NYSCA/NYFA Artist Fellowship Program Recipients and Finalists". NYFA. 2018-07-10. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  32. ^ "Shortlist announced for BMW Art Journey prize". The Art Newspaper - International art news and events. 2017-12-09. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  33. ^ "Negative Space | Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC)". empac.rpi.edu. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  34. ^ "A.K. Burns: Shabby but Thriving". www.newmuseum.org. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  35. ^ "A.K. Burns". Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study at Harvard University. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  36. ^ "A.K. Burns". Creative Capital. Retrieved 2024-09-28.
  37. ^ "People". Fire Island Artist Residency. Retrieved 2024-09-28.