Outside Time
2019
Above: Installation at the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art, January 2022. Photographed by Echard Wheeler.
Slip-cast porcelain lithophanes, custom designed digital components and LED lights, lithium-ion batteries, 3D printed TPU, vintage furniture, acrylic paint.
Included in the exhibition Rae Stern: In Fugue
Recently on view at the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art
11/27/2021 - 3/6/2022
Interview by Randi O’Brien, Studio Potter
Contact Ferrin Contemporary for further information regarding exhibitions and available work.
Images below by T. Maxwell Wagner
As an immersive experience, the installation Outside Time presents dozens of porcelain objects that upon touch light up from within, exposing hidden lithophanes. Combining innovative technology with traditional techniques, the work examines the elusive and ephemeral nature of memory as both a personal and universal phenomenon.
The body of work was created by Stern during her year-long term as Visiting Artist at the Belger Crane Yard Studios and utilizes a porcelain lithophane technique on which she collaborated with Aya Margulis. The ceramic objects are set in bricolage of vintage furniture and juxtaposed with works in paper.
Susan Richter Vignette: Far from home, 2019.
Based on a photograph from the personal archive of Susan Richter. From left: Hedwig and Leon Liebenstein. Germany, ca. 1930s, Ruth Liebenstein Lomnitz. London, early 1940s.
During her stay in Kansas City, Stern conducted community outreach to locate pre-WWII images from the personal albums of local Holocaust survivors and their family members. The images that inspired the lithophanes portray daily scenes from pre-war life in communities across Europe that were later annihilated.
Material culture functions as a medium in Stern’s work and amplifies the sociological and psychological values encapsulated in objects that are traditionally (dis)regarded as decorative art. The pre- and post-war furniture was carefully collected and echoes the ever changing context in which the porcelain objects exist. The use of technology provides an unfamiliar experience with the familiar objects advancing the potential of contemporary ceramics to offer an engaging experience.
By creating an immersive experience and allowing the viewers to touch the ceramic objects, the installation environment brings to life narratives and memories assigned to family heirlooms and explores the potential and limitations of porcelain and paper as repositories for fading memories.
In conjunction with the current refugee crisis, the work invites the viewers to reflect on how all immigrants and refugees, from all societies, leave behind rich memories of normalcy, culture and love.
Exhibition preview and Interview with Rae Stern, exhibiting artist in Shaping Memories: Expressions in Clay at the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art (Virginia MOCA).
Created by Jeremy Bates Film. and courtesy of the Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art.
Collecting Memories
As part of the community outreach, Stern collected reference photographs from the personal archives of local residents of Kansas City, Missouri, that had been affected by WWII. The photographs were used alongside photographs from Stern’s family and friends.
Gathering these seemingly unrelated photos amplifies the universal aspects of traumatic loss and the inevitable cost of a fading memory.