Arts AccessAbility Network Manitoba

Including artists and audiences with disabilities into all facets of the arts community.

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Kim Kitchen – HER VOICE THE WAVES LIKE SILK

This is an advertisement for a visual art show by Kim Kitchen opening November 3, 2023 at 102-329 Cumberland Avenue in Winnipeg and aanm.ca/online-exhibitions. The bottom half of the image is clean white, with simple dark blue text providing the show information and the title: HER VOICE THE WAVES LIKE SILK. Below are the logos for the Province of Manitoba and Arts AccessAbility Network Manitoba, as well as the artist’s website www.kimkitcheninthestudio.com. At the top of the image are slim details from two photographs. In the upper photo, the artist, a light-skinned woman with brown tightly curly hair, lies naked with her back to us on a rocky beach, her feet wrapped in cobalt blue silk which flows over driftwood and exits the picture to the right. The lower image appears more abstract but is understood to be the blue silk floating partially submerged in lake-water, sunlight highlighting the rippling surface.

 

BIO

Kim Kitchen is a multidisciplinary artist working in audio and film as a result of a debilitating and transformative illness. She explores collective cultural understandings of the female body, its intersections with and presence within the natural world. This is also evident through the inclusion of ritual in her work, drawing on her lifelong connection to the Primordial Mother, and to knowledge of her ancestral homelands of old Europe. This ongoing research and consciousness has deeply influenced her artistic practice, which has been largely tactile, focused on painting, sculpture, installation and performance. Currently, Kim engages her practice of critical inquiry of body/ land relations and the self-reflexive relationship between ability and artistic production through largely multimedia approaches. With significant changes in mobility, old spaces become unknown insofar as the body must learn anew how to navigate through them. The familiar becomes unfamiliar: the body is tasked with relearning how to exist, reaching out in changed, renewed and ever urgent ways through creativity. Kim’s community activism is inclusive, celebratory, and exuberant. In contrast, her work is introspective, thoughtful, and prompts quiet reflection. Now more than ever, interdependence is fundamental for this disabled artist. 

STATEMENT

My body is metaphorically situated somewhere in the nexus of both becoming and unbecoming; a rebirth through surrender. With significant changes in mobility, old spaces become unknown insofar as the body must learn anew how to navigate through them. In death and birth, the body is tender and immobile and often left in stillness during both moments of passage. Rituals often include the body swaddled in textiles. This work is celebratory as I was out on the beloved Earth once again. 

Atop a blurry photo of a Canadian shoreline of rounded pink and grey rock with a blue sky above blue water, we see much text.  In big luminous green letters at the top of the image: “ARTIST TALK VIA ZOOM – NOV 20 NOON CST.” The informative text is plain and white, contrasting against a background of blue: “To register for artist talk, email programming@aanm.ca with your name and access needs,” “Kim Kitchen’s video installation is at AANM Gallery 102-329 Cumberland Ave and aanm.ca/online-exhibitions Nov 23-24,” “Kim Kitchen is a multidisciplinary artist working in audio and film as a result of a debilitating and transformative illness. She explores collective cultural understandings of the female body, its intersections with and presence within the natural world.
In Her Voice the Waves Like Silk "my body is metaphorically situated somewhere in the nexus of both becoming and unbecoming; a rebirth through surrender. With significant changes in mobility, old spaces become unknown insofar as the body must learn anew how to navigate through them." In death and birth, the body is tender and immobile and often left in stillness during both moments of passage. Rituals often include the body swaddled in textiles.” The logos for AANM and the Province of Manitoba appear at the bottom.

 

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