Kathy Ruttenberg is an American artist based in New York's Hudson Valley. Originally a painter, she is known for her ceramic sculptures of a "wonder world in which species merge and figures serve as landscapes."[1] Her work is primarily concerned with the figure, the natural world, and human relationships.
To date, Ruttenberg has had more than thirty-five solo shows and her work has been included in more than a hundred group shows.[2] Her sculptures have been acquired by the Mamirauá Sustainable Development Reserve in Amazonas, Brazil, the Tisch Children's Zoo in Central Park in New York City, and the permanent collection of the Museo Internazionale delle Cermiche, as well as by private collectors.
Her work has been featured in a variety of major publications including: The New York Times,[1] New York Magazine,[3] American Craft Magazine,[4] Neue Keramik, Clay Times,[5] Ceramics Monthly,[6] New York Daily News,[7] Avenue, and Ceramics Art and Perception[8]
Early life and education
editRuttenberg was born in Chicago, Illinois, where she lived until her family moved to New York City. She received her BFA with Honors from School of Visual Arts in 1981, majoring in animation and painting while also working with a variety of other mediums. In 1980, her hand-drawn animated film won an honorable mention in the Varna International Film Festival. She continued her education with graduate courses from New York University in Italy and School of Visual Arts in Morocco. In 1992, she relocated to Woodstock, New York, where she has been living and working ever since.[9]
Work
editRuttenberg's work is both figurative and biographical, and makes use of symbols and story telling to convey meaning.[10] Her work expresses a distinctly feminine perspective, with mostly women as main characters and masculine characters depicted in complex but usually secondary roles. Thematically, the natural world and our relationship to it underpin her work and feature broadly in her narratives. Of her process, Ruttenberg says, "I resolve my life's issues through expression in my work ... I think the cocktail of strong emotions and fantasy can take one's creativity to deep and unchartered [sic] territory. With the clay and the watercolour, the two mediums I am now most drawn to, I have found a very easy channel to express ... mythical story telling."[11][citation needed]
Reviews and commentary
editA force to contend with as a narrator and symbolist, a form maker and colorist. Coating sexual tensions with a storybook innocence, she works in a triangle bordered by Louise Bourgeois, Viola Frey and Beatrix Potter. Her blunt figurative style relates to those of Stephan Balkenhol, Claudette Schreuders, Alison Saar, Kiki Smith and, in a way, David Altmejd. She also draws on the centuries-old tradition of porcelain figurines while studiously ignoring all boundaries, especially those dividing insider and outsider; art and craft; and high, low and kitsch.
— Roberta Smith, The New York Times[1]
Her sculptures explore the human-animal boundary, possessing the stately elegance of Proust, as well as the winsome immeadiacy of an indie-pop song—simultaneously solid and slight, rooted down and taking flight.
— American Craft Magazine[4]
The innocence of ceramic figurines disarms viewers and purges their preconceptions to intensify the effects of absurd, visceral visions of, for example, a woman giving birth to a pony whilst lying in her loverʼs frozen arms. The stylized woodland immediately transports her scenes to the realm of fantasy and fairytales, where innocence can be, curiously, both lost and gained as nature absorbs her charactersʼ bodies in brutally whimsical ways. Suspended in a magical world without history and away from political discourse, Ruttenbergʼs works urge us to consider gender rhetoric and feminism in the context of corporeal consciousness and pure imagination. Simultaneously, her earthbound materials and fastidious sensitivity to texture and color interrupt this reverie to render her mise-en-scénes conspicuously tangible and real.
— Wall Street International[12]
Ruttenberg's innovative, imaginative, narrative feminist sculpture—materially as well as conceptually innovative—are perhaps the most creative, certainly unusual, ceramic art being made today.
— Donald Kuspit, Kathy Ruttenberg: In the Female Unconscious[13]
Personal life
editRuttenberg's residence and studio is also home to her animals. A feature in American Craft Magazine states, "On the grounds of Ruttenberg's home are more than fifty rescued animals, from dogs and cats to turkeys and horses. It's a private zoo that functions as a source of artistic inspiration, as well as an animal haven."[4]
In Julien's Journal,[14] she stated, "The anthropomorphic side to my work comes from not just seeing them out in the woods, but having contact with animals every day, feeding them and taking care of them."
Ruttenberg has donated her designs, products, and artworks to benefit Green Chimneys (a Brewster-based nonprofit that uses animals to help special-needs children), the Wildlife Conservation Society (WCS), the Lewa Wildlife Conservancy, the Lemur Conservation Foundation, and the Woodstock Land Conservancy.[10]
References
edit- ^ a b c Smith, Roberta (May 2, 2013). "Kathy Ruttenberg: 'Nature of the Beast'". The New York Times.
- ^ "Stux Gallery". Stux Gallery.
- ^ Stuckey, Charles (April 28, 2013). "The Ruttenberg's Exquisite Rabbit Holes". New York Magazine.
- ^ a b c May, Jennifer (December 15, 2016). "Creature Comforts: Kathy Ruttenberg's home is part art studio, part animal sanctuary". American Craft Magazine.
- ^ Anders, K. T. (November 2003). "Kathy Ruttenberg's Kingdom" (PDF). Clay Times.
- ^ Welch, Adam (December 2013). "Kathy Ruttenberg at Stux Gallery". Ceramics Monthly.
- ^ "Super Ceramics". New York Daily News. April 1, 2007.
- ^ "Kathy Ruttenberg: Despite Appearances, 'The Earth Exhales' is no Fairytale". Arts Observer. May 11, 2012.
- ^ "Kathy Ruttenberg". Stux Gallery. Stux Gallery.
- ^ a b Woods, Lynn (February 18, 2016). "Something wild: Kathy Ruttenberg's Woodstock studio". Hudson Valley One.
- ^ Taleb, Léa (Spring 2013). "Why do goats fall over when frightened?". No. 324. i-D Magazine.
- ^ WSI Administration. "Kathy Ruttenberg. Nature of the Beast". Wall Street International Magazine. Wall Street International Magazine.
- ^ Kuspit, Donald (April 19, 2012). "In the Female Unconscious". Artnet.
- ^ Brandt, Pamela (October 2015). "Figure in the Landscape/Landscape in the Figure". Julien's Journal.