Kelly Dzioba


BIO

Kelly Dzioba, a Connecticut based textile artist, received her BFA from The University of the Arts in Philadelphia in Craft & Material Studies. A former Resident Artist at the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft, she is the recipient of the Peters Valley School of Craft Artist Fellowship, the Lenore Tawney Scholarship, and the William F. Daley Fellowship for study at Haystack Mountain School of Craft. Her work has been exhibited in the United States and abroad at The Textile Center in Minneapolis, MN, The Chautauqua Institution in Chautauqua, NY, High Tide Project Space in Philadelphia, PA, the Seoul Art Center Hangaram Design Museum in Seoul, South Korea, and Gallery Gao Shan in Helsinki, Finland.

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GALLERY

ARTIST STATEMENT

My work is an investigation of textiles as a form of process art. Applying universal elements of textile methods, I make recursive objects based on an accumulating gesture or connection. Similar to the act of weaving, patterns and structure are dictated by the rules of the process. Through the guiding principles of the grid I am able to find common motifs and access familiar aspects of material culture: gem cuts, athletic stripes, studded collars, and patchwork quilts. I converse in the visual languages of minimalism, geometric abstraction, textile tradition and kitsch handicraft as a means of taunting the hierarchy of art and craft.


 My current body of work is the result of haptic discovery and material learning, taking a single gesture- twisting strands of party bead necklaces together until they snap into a tension-held connection- and upon that action building an extensive vocabulary of processes. Working with party beads allows me to bring camp and visual decadence to formalism while exploring themes of value, taste, & consumption. At the root of this work is the need to find comfort and self-soothing in the obsessive nature of making and to find sensory stimulation in the enticing luster of these woven objects.