Los Angeles Artist Kate Mckinney's Latest Show "The Amazing Experience" Takes Books to the Next Level

The installation at Hebrew Union College, Los Angeles, CA takes old text and creates a dimensional look into the books that Ms. McKinney's has transformed into art.

Los Angeles, CA, October 09, 2009 --(PR.com)-- Kate McKinney, a Los Angeles artist, is currently showing at Hebrew Union College in Los Angeles. Her installation in the exhibit "Fresh Voices of Jewish Art," presents the viewer with a spiritual tableau aptly titled "The Amazing Experience." The elements of her piece, which have been assembled with loose spontaneity, are suggestive of itinerant theatre or a child's urgent drawing that witness a profound event. The entire installation is hung overhead and viewed from below, from an earth-bound perspective.

Viewers are deeply moved by the images conveyed by the books. Ms. McKinney, who is Jewish, recently married a Muslim man and this work is not only a statement on the merging of their two cultures, but the possibility of co-existence between all cultures. The very old textbooks include some engineering texts, a nod to her husband.

The centerpiece of this artistic tableau shows two white floating burkas flanking two Stars of David with a flag in its center, attended below by spirits in the form of mutilated books. The two Stars of David are made of dark slats of wood describing the outline; a larger one is behind its smaller twin implying depth or passage. Hanging within the center of these stars, like a sacred object in a reliquary, is a small relief, suspended in a picture frame, of a wind blown American flag. Beneath are five opened books with cut and slashed pages that burst from their old spines in an extravagant display of transformation. There are six more of these altered books hanging from a companion piece nearby. Seen from below the art resembles a surrealistic seascape of origami jellyfish. But mostly they function as intense objects of psychological investment. The artist has carefully mutilated the pages of each book with a sharp knife creating a froth of doily-like forms and startling shredding. Precision and chaos co-exist in these sacrificed books. Through them, Ms. McKinney has mediated suffering and beauty, destruction and creation. They act as poetic objects but are also testimony to a frenetic and obsessive process. It seems that a driven and intense compulsion, such as the cutting of paper dolls over and over again for instance, has been rallied into objects of homage. The process used to make them speaks loudly through them and gives them compelling vitality. Some might mourn or disparage the destruction of books in principle. However, the jagged and sharp edges shooting out of those old faded covers invite a million paper cuts, a book's perfect revenge.

Author A.J. Llewellyn who visited the exhibit and blogged about his experience declared that Ms. McKinney is not just a fresh new voice in Jewish art, but the movement's high priestess: http://tinyurl.com/ye63ufb

Her exhibit is open to the public until December 31, 2009.

Limited editions giclee prints of a variety of Kate McKinney's artwork are available at The Art Gallows website at www.theartgallows.com.

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