Kanchan Wali-Richardson

Kanchan Wali-Richardson (born 1990) is an American interdisciplinary visual artist who currently lives and works in Nashville, Tennessee. Her mother, Monona Wali, is an award-winning storywriter, screenwriter, and filmmaker.

Kanchan Wali-Richardson
Born1990 (age 2930)
United States
Alma materCooper Union
OccupationArtist
Parent(s)Robert Richardson
Monona Wali
RelativesMaya Wali Richardson (sister)
Bibi Haberstock Richardson (sister)
Madeleine Martin Richardson (sister)

Kanchan earned a full scholarship to attend The Cooper Union for the Advancement of Science and Art in New York City, graduating with a BFA in 2012.[1][2] After graduation she worked both as a professional artist and as a designer and fabricator of custom furniture.[2]

Wali-Richardson received the Fulbright Nehru grant for the field of sculpture for the 2014/2015 year and lived in Varanasi, India. During her time in Varanasi, she researched pollution near the Ganges River and created the How to Feed the Hungry Ghosts series during this time. Her maternal family is from the city, yet she was born and raised in America and subsequently felt a cultural divide between the duality of her identity. She reflects that the Hungry Ghosts series is "a quiet meditation on the texture of these ancestral links: the texture of the city, and a rough quality of surfaces".[3] In 2015, she embarked on a project entitled River Sari, which she claims is a response to her time in Varanasi and a homage to the Ganges. The project consists of four handmade silk saris, with the pattern on each sari representing a different personal interaction with the mythology of the Ganges.[4]

The themes of her work primarily center around her personal relationship to the politics, religious implications, and sociality of environmental issues. She has participated in solo and group exhibitions in Los Angeles and New York.

Exhibitions / Publications

Solo or Two Person[1]

  • Under Water with an Open Mouth, Colonnade Gallery (2012)

Group[1]

  • Shed Skin, Da Vinci Gallery (2014)
  • The New Farmers Almanac, Vol. 1 (2013)
  • Work Makes Work, The Cooper Union (2012)
  • On The Table: An Exhibition for Free Tuition at Cooper Union (2011)

Residencies

School of Making Thinking, Roscoe New York (2015)[1]

Kriti Gallery Residency, Varanasi India (2014)[1]

References

  1. "kanchanrichardson". kanchanrichardson. Retrieved March 10, 2018.
  2. "USIEF". www.usief.org.in. Retrieved March 10, 2018.
  3. "kanchanrichardson | fulbright to india". kanchanrichardson. Retrieved March 8, 2019.
  4. "riversari". riversari. Retrieved March 8, 2019.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.