Art Department Faculty Quadrennial Exhibition 2016 January 2016 | Page 30
Laurie Beth
Clark
Professor
UW–Madison Department of Art,
since 1985
Video, Performance, Installation,Visual
Culture Studies, Relational Aesthetics
1983 Master of Fine Arts, Rutgers University
1981 Master of Arts, University of New Mexico
1976 Bachelor of Arts, Hampshire College
Recent achievements
2015 Foodways Darmstadt, KunstTREFFpunkt und Internationalen
Waldkunst Zentrum, Darmstadt, Germany
White ForeignerWalking Tours:
2015 Xenos (ξένος), Athens, Greece
2014 Chinkewah, Lhasa, Tibet
2014 Lao Wei (老外), Great Wall, China
2014 Extranjero (Yanqui), Tijuana, Mexico
2014 Extranjero (Yanqui), Lima, Peru
2014 Foreigner, London
2014 Cooking With: Xin Wang, The Gallery, West Bund Art Center,
Shanghai, China
2014 Ossuary, Herron Galleries, Indiana University–Purdue University Indianapolis
2014 Progressive Dinner: Problem Solving Social Practice in Art, Obermann
Center for Advanced Studies, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA
Artist’s statement
In 2008, I began a series of “walking tours” to take up questions of
outsider status or foreignness. I wear “surgical” masks of camouflage
fabrics and take walks in unfamiliar locations outside of the United
States.
Over the last seven years, I have performed walks in Argentina, Brazil, Cambodia, Canada, Chile, China, Columbia, Croatia, Denmark,
England, France, Germany, Greece, India, Indonesia, Italy, Japan,
Kenya, Korea, Laos, Mexico, Morocco, Nepal, the Netherlands, Peru,
14 Quadrennial 2016 | Faculty
Poland, Portugal, Rwanda, South Africa, Slovenia, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland, Thailand, Tibet, and Uruguay.
Fabric masks, which I originally saw in Vietnam being worn by people
on mopeds and motorbikes, are dysfunctional barriers, as the fabric
provides neither medical nor environmental protection. Arguably,
they are more effective as signifiers, which leave open the question of
whether the mask is meant to protect the wearer from the environment or the environment from the wearer.
I was curious about how one chooses to figure one’s own identity
as a visual representative of a group that may have been historically
aligned with colonization, but other important themes in the work,
especially as I have walked in Europe and North America, are (im)
migration and (dis)location.
I use camouflage fabrics to draw attention to the (im)possibility and/
or the (un)desirability of blending in with a dominant culture. But as
I have performed the work in different countries, the referents of the
masks have changed, influenced by both context (guerillas in Colombia) and timing (SARS in Argentina).
After each walk, I try to embroider one mask with the (often pejorative) term for (white) foreigners, words like angrez, baraig, bule, farang,
gaigin, gringo, gweilo, haole, mzungo, obruni.
Work in the show
Laurie Beth Clark (American, b. 1956)
Lao Wei (老外), 2014, performance documentation, 103 x 58 ½ in.
Etranger, 2011, performance documentation, 41 ⅜ x 31 ⅜ in.
Chile, 2012, performance documentation, 28 x 44 in.