Kate Borcherding Explained

Kate Borcherding
Birth Name:Mary Kate Borcherding
Birth Date:October 26, 1960
Birth Place:Palatine, Illinois, US
Field:Mixed media
Printmaking; Sculpture; Ceramics; Photography
Training:University of Wisconsin–Madison, B.S.; Indiana University Bloomington, Master of Fine Arts

Kate Borcherding (born October 26, 1960) is an American artist working in mixed media. Her artistic style is both neoclassical and postmodern. Her art mainly focuses on the human figure,[1] and is often psychological in nature with narratives expressed across multiple layers.

Career

Sculpture

"The common thread in her work is its emotional strength, gestural qualities, layered textures, and the centrality of the human figure or the experience of being human."[2] She often explores making invisible concepts visible: people in the act of thinking, narratives wherein something is hidden or revealed, and daily cycles of life against longer cycles of geologic or celestial time. "She is fascinated by the power of the human figure as it reaches monumental size, when it crosses the boundary and projects energy into an individual’s psychological space, when the art becomes participatory."[2] By infusing the making of the art into the art, she captures a specific ‘moment in time’ that contrasts deep rhythms and underlying forces. Her desire, conceptually parallel to different tempos of time outlined by historian Fernand Braudel, is to capture these human moments within the larger context of universal humanity.

Environmental Sculpture

Borcherding’s site-specific environmental sculpture pushes the space relationship between object and observer even further so that the observer walks into and on the art.[3]

“When I came down here I had lots of sketches and ideas,” says Borcherding, an art professor at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas. "But then you quickly realize you can impose or you can take what’s here and run with it. So right now I’m chasing the project, rather than imposing.”[3] With waders on, Borcherding creates many of her tall sculptures in the water. “They can stand on their own like a piece of art in the water, like it’s matted and framed,” she says. The marrying of natural elements with man-made organization also fascinates the artist. “As you change the edge to man-made and then let it go back to nature, it creates these natural punctuation marks or pauses. It’s interesting to see how far you have to go to create contrast.”[3]

"You have the idea in your head but you can’t work on a grand scale, you just have to start. You start by placing objects … it is almost as if you are sketching out. And then you have to use the space as a catalyst. What makes an environmental art piece successful since it is on a grand scale and you as the viewer walk on to the piece, you are surrounded by the piece, you walk over the piece and you participate with it, so it becomes this full body experience that you have, which is different than you have if you would view just front on a sculpture or in the round in a gallery."

Ceramics

Her ceramic work focuses on the creation of assemblages incorporating either the human form or a personification of an object. She makes use of visual symbols which she extracts and extends from the direct observation of an environment including important cultural, architectural or technological representations.[4] Projecting the object into the observers’ psychological space compels observers to “dive in” with their own humanity as an emotive participant in order to unfold the inner narrative of the art. Through this re-living of an inner world of an important period and place a universal moment from the past becomes alive.

Print work

Borcherding's print work is described as “direct, strongly graphic, sinewy and somewhat raw and rough images with a strong clear component of feeling in the content or depiction”.[5]

Biographical

Borcherding's long studio career in visual arts is complemented with a commitment to art education which she fulfills through printmaking, ceramic and life drawing workshops. She is currently developing a drawing and anatomy curriculum for online education under the moniker “Art Team”.[4] She is also an art professor at Sam Houston State University,[6] where she has been employed since 1993. During the academic year she lives on a working horse and cattle ranch in Texas. Summers are enjoyed in and around Madison, Wisconsin.[4]

Awards and honors

Exhibitions and installations

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Kate Borcherding: Developing Narrative Figurative Sculpture Wksp / November 15 & 16 / Baltimore Clayworks. 15 August 2014. Ceramic Arts Daily. 6 March 2015.
  2. Web site: Arts/Industry Current Residents. John Michael Kohler Arts Center. 7 November 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20151102025711/http://www.jmkac.org/index.php/artsindustry-residency/current-residents. 2 November 2015. dead.
  3. Web site: Kate Borcherding Stacks Stones for Memory Diaries Art Project. Slattery. Sally. 28 June 2013. Peninsula Pulse. 6 March 2015.
  4. Web site: Kate Borcherding Workshop: WS05 –Developing Narrative Figurative Sculpture. Baltimore Clayworks. 6 March 2015.
  5. Web site: Kate Borcherding (1993). The Walter Darby Bannard Archive. 6 March 2015.
  6. Web site: Kate Borcherding. Sam Houston State University. 6 March 2015.
  7. Web site: Facebook. www.facebook.com. 20 November 2023.
  8. Web site: News - Department of Art -Sam Houston State University. Sam Houston State. University. SHSU. 20 November 2023.
  9. Web site: AMoA BIENNIAL 600: PRINTMAKING - Amarillo Museum of Art . 2013-06-05 . 2013-07-27 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130727065712/http://amarilloart.org/index.php?module=article&id=190 . dead .
  10. http://www.artlinkfw.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/10/print-catalog-33-website1.pdf Catalog 33
  11. Web site: Baltimore Clayworks–Meet the Artists . 2013-01-26 . 2012-08-19 . https://web.archive.org/web/20120819031524/http://www.baltimoreclayworks.org/artists/visiting_artists.html . dead.
  12. Web site: Galleryschedule12_13 . 2012-12-19 . 2013-04-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20130404145720/http://ww2.valdosta.edu/art/galleryschedule12_13.shtml . dead.
  13. https://web.ccis.edu/Departments/VisualArtsAndMusic/PaperInParticular.aspx Columbia College
  14. Web site: Department of Art and Art History, University of Texas at Tyler - Plan 1 Model for Asylum, Andrew Hairstans | Facebook. www.facebook.com. 20 November 2023.
  15. Web site: SEMO News . 31 May 2023.
  16. Web site: MSU - Northwest Art Center . 2014-01-23 . 2014-02-04 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140204010131/http://www.minotstateu.edu/nac/2xxx.shtml . dead.
  17. Web site: Baltimore Clayworks–See an Exhibition. baltimoreclayworks.org . https://web.archive.org/web/20141006101454/http://baltimoreclayworks.org/exhibition/exhibition_gallery/14/Looking_at_Ourselves.html . 2014-10-06.
  18. Web site: MSU - Northwest Art Center . 2015-03-17 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150402142731/http://www.minotstateu.edu/nac/pw_2k_2014.shtml . 2015-04-02 . dead.
  19. Web site: Aether special edition 2014 by Aether Magazine - Issuu . 13 January 2014 .
  20. Web site: The Contemporary Print . 2014-01-21 . 2014-02-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140201175348/http://womenprintmakers.com/events.asp?v=participants&eventID=121 . dead .
  21. Web site: Memory Diaries Art Installation, + 100 Year Personal Archive .
  22. Web site: Facebook. www.facebook.com. 20 November 2023.
  23. Web site: MSU - Northwest Art Center . 2013-01-01 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140222024109/http://www.minotstateu.edu/nac/pw_2k_2012.shtml . 2014-02-22 . dead .
  24. Web site: MSU - Northwest Art Center . 2012-12-20 . https://web.archive.org/web/20140221114100/http://www.minotstateu.edu/nac/pw_2k_2011.shtml . 2014-02-21 . dead .
  25. http://sgcinternational.org/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/SGCI-Fall-2011-Newsletter.pdf The Newsletter of SGC International