Genevieve Gaignard Explained

Genevieve Gaignard
Birth Date:1981
Birth Place:Orange, Massachusetts
Nationality:American
Education:Massachusetts College of Art and Design (2007), Yale University (2013)
Known For:Photography, Videography, Installation
Website:http://www.genevievegaignard.com/home

Genevieve Gaignard, born in Orange, Massachusetts in 1981, is best known for work exploring issues of race, class, and gender. As a self-identified mixed-race woman, Gaignard utilizes photography, videography, and installation to explore the overlap of black and white America through staged environments and character performances. She received an AAS in Baking & Pastry Arts from Johnson & Wales University, her BA in photography from the Massachusetts College of Art and Design in 2007, and an MFA from Yale University in 2014.[1] Gaignard's work is represented by Susanne Vielmetter Los Angeles Projects, and has been shown at Shulamit Nazarian, The Cabin, The FLAG Art Foundation, The California African American Museum, The Foley Gallery, and at two residentially-owned art spaces in Los Angeles, CA. She was also included in the fourth iteration of the triennial Prospect New Orleans, in 2018, with an installation at the Ace Hotel New Orleans. Her work has been featured in The New York Times and The Los Angeles Times. Gaignard's photographic series draw inspiration from Carrie Mae Weems, Diane Arbus, Cindy Sherman, and Nikki S. Lee, remixed with the references to the selfie and Instagram culture.[2] [3] [4]

Early life

Born and raised in a Massachusetts mill town by a white mother and black father, Gaignard grew up between black and white cultures. Before enrolling at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design, Gaignard first enrolled at Johnson & Wales University in Providence, Rhode Island, in their baking and pastry program. She became interested in pursuing the arts after one of her professors became her mentor. Her professor created alternative assignments for Gaignard, reintroduced her to mediums such as collage, and opened Gaignard to experimentation in installation. According to Gaignard, she “went through this phase where Abercrombie & Fitch was really cool, I would rip pages out of the catalog and collage my whole wall with half naked guys.”[5] Gaignard began investigating racial dynamics with the use of composed environments and fabricated characters.

Gaignard began photographing her family and neighbors as she transitioned into the Massachusetts College of Art and Design. For a week of assignments “dealing with flesh,” Gaignard used her mother as a subject.[6]

Following her graduation in 2007, she applied to Yale University where she was wait-listed. Her anxiety surrounding her admission status motivated her to experiment with video art, where she created offbeat films. After she was eventually accepted, Gaignard transitioned back to photographic mediums with the added juxtaposition of installation. Yale's predominantly white student body contrasted sharply with the culturally diverse city of New Haven, prompting Gaignard to think through how to balance her two ethnicities. During her time at Yale, she began incorporating the intensity of race and storytelling in her work: “My expression as a person of color is different than others. I have something to say...The stuff I say now sort of addresses a lot of feelings I had as a child.”[7] It was through her exploration of race and family relations that she began creating personas staged in elaborate domestic interiors.[8]

Work

As an emerging artist, Gaignard first garnered wider attention with her 2016 exhibition Smell the Roses at the California African American Museum in Los Angeles. The exhibition included a number of photographs of Gaignard dressed as a variety of characters alongside two elaborate room-sized installations, one of them a bedroom with a daybed covered in Cabbage Patch Kids dolls. Of the nine photographs featured in the exhibition, "Extra Value (After Venus)", shows Gaignard against a painted American flag holding a McDonald's cup and fries; another depicts Gaignard as a small-town housewife holding a watermelon in front of a discount store.[9]

Gaignard explores racial “passing” and gender to address the difficulties of being a mixed race woman in American society.[10] While Gaignard's work is said to be similar to Cindy Sherman and Carrie Mae Weems, she prefers not to be compared to them. Like Weems, Gaignard's works focuses on black female bodies and their place within society.[11] Gaignard's digital photographs utilize pop culture references and selfie culture to examine mixed race identity and black womanhood.[12] She consistently questions mass media and how it presents white and black cultures by pushing contrasts in her fictitious, femme characters.

Gaignard blends her digital photography with installations evoking the ideal family home. She states, “When I make an installation, I want it to be somewhere between a Wes Anderson film and Harmony Korine’s Gummo: gross and perfect at the same time but those are also super white references—so, that’s always my challenge.”[5]

Gaignard exaggerates elements of her personas, posing racial anxieties for viewers through parallel perspectives of her own self-identity. Although racial contrast is important to her characters and her overall work, Gaignard also blurs the lines between representations of black and white women by drawing on current and past pop culture references.[13] By blending representations, stereotypes, and taking inspiration from drag culture, she further challenges beauty standard norms, while also showing others the “invisibility” she faced growing up.[14]

Gaignard's work is in a number of public collections, including the Allen Memorial Art Museum, Nasher Museum of Art, California African American Museum, Pérez Art Museum Miami, Studio Museum in Harlem, and San Jose Museum of Art.

Exhibitions

Group Exhibitions[15] !!Exhibit Name!Venue!Year
1Yale MFA First-Year Student ExhibitionLocation: New Haven, Connecticut2013
2Yale MFA Second-Year Student ExhibitionYale School of Art: Green Hall GalleryLocation: New Haven, Connecticut2013
313 ArtistsYale School of ArtLocation: New Haven, Connecticut2014
4Deep End Yale MFA Photography ThesisYale School of Art: Green Hall Gallery, The FLAG Art Foundation, Diane Rosenstein Gallery2014
5Shaq Loves PeopleExpose ChicagoNote: Curated by Shaquille O'Neal

Location: Chicago, Illinois

2014
6The New NewDiane Rosenstein GalleryLocation: Los Angeles, California2014
7Other Spacesdc3Location: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada2016
8Summer SchoolThe FLAG Art FoundationLocation: New York, New York2016
9Industrydc3Location: Edmonton, Alberta, Canada2017
10Comm | Alt | ShiftAljira Center for Contemporary ArtLocation: Newark, New Jersey2017
11Face to Face: Los Angeles Collects PortraitureCalifornia African American MuseumLocation: Los Angeles, California2017
12FictionsStudio MuseumLocation: Harlem, New York2017
13Opening the TrapInterface GalleryLocation: San Francisco, California2018
14Forms & Alterations808 Gallery at Boston UniversityLocation: Boston, Massachusetts2018
15Fun HouseJosh Lilley GalleryLocation: London, United Kingdom2018
16Talisman in the Age of DifferenceStephen Friedman GalleryLocation: London, United Kingdom2018
17In This Imperfect Present MomentSeattle Art Museum2018
18People Get ReadyNasher Museum of Art at Duke UniversityLocation: Durham, North Carolina2018
19Radically Ordinary: Scenes from Black Life in America Since 1968Allen Memorial Art MuseumLocation: Oberlin, Ohio2018
20Daegu BiennaleDaeguLocation: Daegu, South Korea2018
21Personal SpaceCrystal Bridges Museum of American ArtLocation:Bentonville, Arkansas2018
22Parallels and PeripheriesArtCenterLocation: Miami, Florida2018
23Terres de FemmesPraz-DelavalladeLocation: Paris, France2018
Solo Exhibitions!!Exhibit Name!Venue!Year
1A Golden State of MindDiane Rosenstein Presents at The Cabin LALocation: Los Angeles, California2015
2Us OnlyShulamit NazarianLocation: Los Angeles, California2015
3Smell the RosesCalifornia African American MuseumLocation: Los Angeles, California2016
4The Powder RoomShulamit NazarianLocation: Los Angeles, California2017
5In PassingHouston Center for PhotographyLocation: Houston Texas2017
6GrassrootsProspect 4Location: New Orleans, Louisiana2017
7Hidden FencesPraz-DelavalladeLocation: Paris, France2018
8Counterfeit CurrencyThe FLAG Art FoundationLocation: New York, New York2018

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Genevieve Gaignard Biography. Shulamit Nazarian. 10 April 2018.
  2. Web site: L.A. Woman: The many faces of Genevieve Gaignard. Hernandez. Jasmin. 10 April 2016. Konbini United States.
  3. Web site: How selfies reflect a new generation of artists. Star Tribune. 2019-03-02.
  4. Web site: In Search of the Authentic Selfie. 2017-11-09. Hyperallergic. en-US. 2019-03-02.
  5. Web site: Need To Know: Genevieve Gaignard's Colorblind Character Studies. Indrisek. Scott. 22 March 2016. Outmagazine. 27 February 2017.
  6. Web site: Need To Know: Genevieve Gaignard's Colorblind Character Studies. 2016-03-22. www.out.com. en. 2019-03-02.
  7. Web site: Artist Explodes Racial Stereotypes In Shape-Shifting Photographs. Frank. Priscilla. 21 October 2016. The Huffington Post. 16 February 2017.
  8. Web site: Review Genevieve Gaignard: For Us Only. Eler. Alicia. 22 April 2016. Crave. 16 February 2017.
  9. Web site: Genevieve Gaignard tackles race, class and identity at the California African American Museum. Vankin. Deborah. Los Angeles Times. 17 November 2016 . 2019-03-02.
  10. Web site: ShulamitNazarian LosAngeles. Gaignard. Genevieve. Shulamit Nazarian. 16 February 2017.
  11. Web site: How Biracial Photographer Genevieve Gaignard is Raging Against Invisibility. Recinos. Eva. 12 October 2016. L.A. Weekly. 16 February 2017.
  12. Web site: Genevieve Gaignard 24 Artworks, Bio & Shows. Artsy. 16 February 2017.
  13. Web site: Genevieve Gaignard tackles race, class and identity at the California African American Museum. Vankin. Deborah. 17 November 2016. Los Angeles Times. 16 February 2017.
  14. Web site: Genevieve Gaignard: Stay Out Of Her Way!. 24 August 2016. The Art Gorgeous. 28 February 2017.
  15. Web site: C.V. - Genevieve Gaignard. www.genevievegaignard.com. 2018-12-20.