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Renae Barnard

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Love > Shelter : Sculpture, Bowerbirds and Gender Performance

Sarah Barnard October 18, 2021

"Love is Greater Than Shelter" is a multimedia piece by Renae Barnard that explores the search for comfort and security through romantic love.

Inspired by bowerbirds, Barnard uses found materials to build a nestlike structure. However, like the structures created by a bower bird, the form is not for shelter but serves a more ornamental purpose, fostering connection, communication, and relationship building.

Bowerbirds are known for their decorative structures, that while somewhat resembling nests, are used as a backdrop for the males' performative mating displays. Bowerbirds are known for their discerning use of materials, selecting a range of objects in like colors that vary depending on the region of the birds. In several cases, Bowerbirds appear to utilize forced perspective, laying larger objects in the back and smaller in the front, a creative visual tool rarely observed among animals.

This optical illusion is a natural form of visual trickery, a theme that resonates with Barnard and her work. Humans often look to forms of self-deception to perform an illusion of security, frequently during unstable times. Creation may offer a sense of control, whether building a space for comfort, a work of art, or a relationship. At times of distress, security, or the sensation of security, can be constructed with whatever is at our disposal, creating emotional shelter from readily available components of our lives.

Barnard's use of yarn and twine is not only a nod to repurposing often discarded or overlooked materials to build something new, but the pathways and sense of control many seek over their lives. Considering the Greek Moirai, Barnard's use of string offers an illusion of control over fate, destiny, and the flow of life. The soft material is then covered with layers of paints and hardened into place, removing all flexibility and solidifying any decisions or pathways. The hardened external materials immobilize and protect the string, rendering it nearly unidentifiable in its newly constructed form.

Barnard considers the tangling forces of gender norms and the friction of power structures against the day-to-day experience of moving through the world.

Renae Barnard is a multidisciplinary artist. Barnard received her Master of Fine Arts from Claremont Graduate University and her BA from California State University, Los Angeles. She has recently completed projects in cooperation with the National Immigration Law Center and the City of Santa Monica Department of Cultural Affairs. She is a recipient of the Sue Arlen Walker and Harvey M. Parker Memorial Fellowship, the Armory Center for the Arts Teaching Artist Fellowship, The Ahmanson Annual Fellowship, Lincoln Fellowship Award, and Christopher Street West Art and Culture Grant.

Tags Fiber art, fiber artist, textile artwork, textile art, textile sculpture, custom textile art, multimedia art, multimedia artist, women artist, los angeles textile artist, custom textile work los angeles, custom art installations, custom art installations los angeles, woven textile artwork, bowerbird, bowerbirds, bower birds, bowers, bower bird sculpture, salt sculpture, salt sculptures, fiber art, california fiber artist, yarn sculpture, sculpture of yarn, salt art, salt artwork, living art, feminist sculpture, feminist art, gender art, gender performance, experimental visual art, los angeles artist, los angeles artists, los angeles sculptor, experimental sculpture, salt artist, salt artists, desert palette art, 80s color palette art, women artists, Textile Art, textile art exhibition, textile arts la, textile arts los angeles, la textile arts, textile sculptures, textile artist
Textile Arts Los Angeles new exhibition features 45 artists exploring the limits of fiber based art.

Textile Arts Los Angeles new exhibition features 45 artists exploring the limits of fiber based art.

Tricksters and Transformations: Textile Arts Los Angeles Exhibition

Sarah Barnard August 27, 2021

“Textiles have the universally demonstrated capacity for holding meaning, establishing connections, and creating healing. As we emerge, on many levels, from the darkness into the light of awareness of isolation and injustice we have an opportunity and obligation to examine the status quo. This exhibition will allow the artist to step into the now and make work that opens doors within themselves, thereby acting as a portal to a collective resurgence into a renewed relationship with the world. This awakening inspires transformation.”

Renae Barnard is showing her mixed media work, Love > Shelter.

Renae Barnard is showing her mixed media work, Love > Shelter.

When: Saturday, September 4, 2021 to Sunday, September 26, 2021.

*Soft Opening Saturday, September 4, 2021 3:00 PM 5:00 PM

Where: Helms Design Center 8745 Washington Boulevard Culver City, CA, 90232 United States (map)

Detail of Love> Shelter by artist Renae Barnard.

Detail of Love> Shelter by artist Renae Barnard.

There is a deep potential for the artist to act as trickster, agent of change, or boundary crosser. After the pandemic and the social upheaval of the past eighteen months, the artist has gained renewed agency for creating more enlightened definitions of meaning and new ways of seeing.

The pandemic can be a portal, serving as a provocation to transformation.

We ask:

  • What kinds of conversations can the artist communicate and express after this moment?

  • What was the conventional wisdom?

  • What layers need to be exposed?

  • What patterns need disrupting or subverted?

  • What ideas need shedding?

  • What and how do we heal?

  • How do you translate this sense of agency and transformation into your own practice?

  • How can the medium, process and history of textiles serve as a fertile conceptual ground for our work?

    —-Textile Arts Los Angeles

Found and recycled materials are the foundation of Renae’s sculptural work.

Found and recycled materials are the foundation of Renae’s sculptural work.

Renae is delighted to be showing with friends old and new. The featured artists are

Beth Abaravich

Hammad Abid

Berfin Ataman

Renae Barnard

Charlotte bird

Anne M Bray

Carrie Burkle

Debbie Carlson

Molly Cleator

Debra Disman

Doshi

Sally England

Emilyn Eto

Lea Feinstein

Michelle Flores

Dellis Frank

Gail Fraser

Anna Faye Korngute

Diana Fullmer and Nick Kuriyama

Polly Jacobs Giacchina

Karen Gibson Roc

Annette Heully

Lesley Kice Nishigawara

Michael Koch

Dong Kyu Kim

Tina Linville

Carmen Mardonez

Patricia Martin

Victoria May

Michelle Montjoy

Wendy Osher

Antonia Price

Michael Rohde

Connie Rohman

Gwen Samuels

Karen Sikie

Maryrose Smyth

Ruth Souza

Meredith Strauss

Dusty Taylor Guerra

Cameron Taylor Brown

Lydia Tjioe Hall

Tamara Tolkin

Elise Vazelakis

Kay Whitney

Peggy Wiedemann

Susan Zimmerman

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Renae Barnard is a multidisciplinary artist living and working in Los Angeles. Barnard received her Master of Fine Arts from Claremont Graduate University and her BA from California State University, Los Angeles. She has recently completed projects in cooperation with the National Immigration Law Center and the City of Santa Monica Department of Cultural Affairs. She is a recipient of the Sue Arlen Walker and Harvey M. Parker Memorial Fellowship, the Armory Center for the Arts Teaching Artist Fellowship, The Ahmanson Annual Fellowship, Lincoln Fellowship Award, and Christopher Street West Art and Culture Grant.

Tags tricksters and transformations, los angeles textile arts, los angeles textile artist, ecological artist, ecological art, eco-friendly art, soft sculpture, love is greater than shelter, textile artwork, textile art, textile sculpture, textile arts la, la textile arts, fiber art, fiber art exhibition, fiber artist, fiber artists, fiber exhibition, fiber sculpture, fiber installation art, California textile artist, california installation art, california, bowerbird, renae barnard, renae barnard artist, Beth Abaravich, Hammad Abid, Berfin Ataman, Renae Barnard, Charlotte bird, Anne M bray, Carrie Burkle, Debbie Carlson, Molly Cleator, Debra Disman, Doshi, Sally England, Emilyn Eto, Lea Feinstein, Michelle Flores, Dellis Frank, Gail Fraser, Anna Faye Korngute, Diana Fullmer and Nick Kuriyama, Polly Jacobs Giacchina, Karen Gibson Roc, Annette Heully, Lesley Kice Nishigawara, Michael Koch, Dong Kyu Kim, Tina Linville, Carmen Mardonez, Patricia Martin, Victoria May, Michelle Montjoy, Wendy Osher, Antonia price, Michael Rohde, Connie Rohman, Gwen Samuels, Karen Sikie, MaryRose Smyth, Ruth Souza, Meredith Strauss, Dusty Taylor Guerra, Cameron Taylor Brown, Lydia Tjioe Hall, Tamara Tolkin, Elise Vazelakis, Kay Whitney, Peggy Wiedemann, Susan Zimmerman
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Opening Reception: The Happiness You Deserve at Adams Square Park

Sarah Barnard August 23, 2021

Saturday, August 28th, 2021 from 2-4 pm. Hosted by Glendale’s Adams Hill Neighborhood Association and the City of Glendale Arts and Culture. Free and open to the public, this event celebrates the artist Renae Barnard and her new site-specific installation, the Happiness You Deserve. The reception will be held outdoors at Adams Square Mini Park, 1020 E Palmer Ave, Glendale, CA 91204.

Photos by Renae Barnard

Photos by Renae Barnard

Installation View: The Happiness You Deserve, inside Adams Square Park’s Historic Gas Station Building.

Installation View: The Happiness You Deserve, inside Adams Square Park’s Historic Gas Station Building.

Detail of paper twisted around bamboo poles collected from the artist’s garden.

Detail of paper twisted around bamboo poles collected from the artist’s garden.

Artist Renae Barnard’s installation, The Happiness You Deserve, will be on display at the Adams Square Mini Park Gas Station from August 23 – October 1, 2021. “The Happiness You Deserve" is a temporary, fiber-based installation considering the unique location of this historic structure: a 1936 Streamline Moderne Gas Station that exists in a small and unexpectedly green, nature-abundant park within the city. Renae is known for her fiber-based work using upcycled and found materials to explore the network of interactions between environment, perception, and well-being. For this project, she is considering the ways in which the sculpture might engage with the space, contemplating illumination in the evening hours to draw continuous attention to the nature-rich site.

Detail View: From inside the gas station, viewing the artwork and the garden.

Detail View: From inside the gas station, viewing the artwork and the garden.

Through the process of creating the work, Renae will be working through ideas surrounding the connection of well-being and nature. The mission of the Glendale Arts and Culture Commission is to enrich the human experience, reinforce Glendale’s identity and civic pride through arts and culture, and to recognize the importance of arts to our quality of life and to the local economy. This is accomplished by consciously integrating arts and culture into the daily life of the people of Glendale through urban design, planning, economic development, and education.

The Happiness You Deserve 0006 small.jpg
Detail View: Salvaged bamboo poles, recycled newsprint, upcycled tracing paper and found packing paper are combined in the site specific sculpture, The Happiness You Deserve.

Detail View: Salvaged bamboo poles, recycled newsprint, upcycled tracing paper and found packing paper are combined in the site specific sculpture, The Happiness You Deserve.

The Happiness You Deserve 0002 small.jpg
Detail View: Wire fasteners safely secure the sculpture to a simple structure inside the ceiling of the historic building.

Detail View: Wire fasteners safely secure the sculpture to a simple structure inside the ceiling of the historic building.

Renae Barnard is a multidisciplinary artist living and working in Los Angeles. Barnard received her Master of Fine Arts from Claremont Graduate University and her BA from California State University, Los Angeles. She has recently completed projects in cooperation with the National Immigration Law Center and the City of Santa Monica Department of Cultural Affairs. She is a recipient of the Sue Arlen Walker and Harvey M. Parker Memorial Fellowship, the Armory Center for the Arts Teaching Artist Fellowship, The Ahmanson Annual Fellowship, Lincoln Fellowship Award, and Christopher Street West Art and Culture Grant.

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About Glendale Library, Arts & Culture Founded in 1907, the Glendale Library, Arts & Culture Department (GLAC) includes six neighborhood libraries as well as the Brand Library & Art Center, a regional visual arts and music library and performance venue housed in the historic 1904 mansion of Glendale pioneer Leslie C. Brand, and the Central Library, a 93,000 square foot center for individuals and groups to convene, collaborate and create. Now on the web at www.eGlendaleLAC.org, GLAC also serves as the chief liaison to the Glendale Arts and Culture Commission which works to continually transform Glendale into an ever-evolving arts and culture destination. For more information contact Library, Arts & Culture at 818-548-2021 or via email at LibraryInfo@glendaleca.gov.

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About the City of Glendale & its Arts and Culture Commission Known as the “Jewel City,” Glendale is the fourth largest city of Los Angeles County. With a population of more than 200,000, Glendale is a thriving cosmopolitan city that is rich in history, culturally diverse, and offers nearly 50 public parks, and easy access to a municipal airport. It is home to a vibrant business community, with major companies in healthcare, entertainment, manufacturing, retail, and banking. Its Arts and Culture Commission administers a developer-funded program which is working to transform Glendale into an arts and culture destination for the Southern California region. The mission of the Glendale Arts and Culture Commission is to enrich the human experience, reinforce Glendale’s identity and civic pride through arts and culture, and to recognize the importance of arts to our quality of life and to the local economy. This is accomplished by consciously integrating arts and culture into the daily life of the people of Glendale through urban design, planning, economic development, and education. For more information about the Glendale Arts and Culture Commission see the website: https://www.glendaleartsandculture.org/ @myglendaleLAC #myglendaleLAC www.eGlendaleLAC.org

Tags fiber exhibition, fiber artist, fiber sculpture, fiber installation art, fiber artists, fiber art fiber art exhibition, california fiber artist, textile artwork, textile art, soft sculpture, paper weaving, paper rope, paper art, paper structures, paper sculpture, paper installation
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Fiber-based Artwork: Connections Between Environment, Perception, and Well-being.

Sarah Barnard August 20, 2021

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

THE HAPPINESS YOU DESERVE Art Installation at Glendale’s Adams Square Mini Park Gas Station

GLENDALE, CA – Artist Renae Barnard’s installation, The Happiness You Deserve, will be on display at the Adams Square Mini Park Gas Station from August 23 – October 1, 2021. “The Happiness You Deserve" is a temporary, fiber-based installation considering the unique location of this historic structure: a 1936 Streamline Moderne Gas Station that exists in a small and unexpectedly green, nature-abundant park within the city. Renae is known for her fiber-based work using upcycled and found materials to explore the network of interactions between environment, perception, and well-being. For this project, she is considering the ways in which the sculpture might engage with the space, contemplating illumination in the evening hours to draw continuous attention to the nature-rich site.

The artist harvested bamboo poles from her garden to use as the structural support of her current work.

The artist harvested bamboo poles from her garden to use as the structural support of her current work.

Through the process of creating the work, Renae will be working through ideas surrounding the connection of well-being and nature. The mission of the Glendale Arts and Culture Commission is to enrich the human experience, reinforce Glendale’s identity and civic pride through arts and culture, and to recognize the importance of arts to our quality of life and to the local economy. This is accomplished by consciously integrating arts and culture into the daily life of the people of Glendale through urban design, planning, economic development, and education.

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For more information about the Glendale Arts and Culture Commission see the website: https://www.glendaleartsandculture.org/

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About Glendale Library, Arts & Culture Founded in 1907, the Glendale Library, Arts & Culture Department (GLAC) includes six neighborhood libraries as well as the Brand Library & Art Center, a regional visual arts and music library and performance venue housed in the historic 1904 mansion of Glendale pioneer Leslie C. Brand, and the Central Library, a 93,000 square foot center for individuals and groups to convene, collaborate and create. Now on the web at www.eGlendaleLAC.org, GLAC also serves as the chief liaison to the Glendale Arts and Culture Commission which works to continually transform Glendale into an ever-evolving arts and culture destination. For more information contact Library, Arts & Culture at 818-548-2021 or via email at LibraryInfo@glendaleca.gov.

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About the City of Glendale & its Arts and Culture Commission Known as the “Jewel City,” Glendale is the fourth largest city of Los Angeles County. With a population of more than 200,000, Glendale is a thriving cosmopolitan city that is rich in history, culturally diverse, and offers nearly 50 public parks, and easy access to a municipal airport. It is home to a vibrant business community, with major companies in healthcare, entertainment, manufacturing, retail, and banking. Its Arts and Culture Commission administers a developer-funded program which is working to transform Glendale into an arts and culture destination for the Southern California region. The mission of the Glendale Arts and Culture Commission is to enrich the human experience, reinforce Glendale’s identity and civic pride through arts and culture, and to recognize the importance of arts to our quality of life and to the local economy. This is accomplished by consciously integrating arts and culture into the daily life of the people of Glendale through urban design, planning, economic development, and education. For more information about the Glendale Arts and Culture Commission see the website: https://www.glendaleartsandculture.org/ @myglendaleLAC #myglendaleLAC www.eGlendaleLAC.org

Photos by Renae Barnard

Photos by Renae Barnard

Media Contact: Jennifer Fukutomi-Jones, Principal Arts & Culture Administrator Glendale Library, Arts & Culture 222 E. Harvard St. Glendale, CA 91205

Email: jfjones@glendaleca.gov

Office: 818-937-7808

Tags fiber exhibition, fiber artist, fiber sculpture, fiber installation art, fiber artists, fiber art fiber art exhibition, california fiber artist, textile artwork, textile art, textile artist, recycled artists, recycled art practice, recycled art materials, renae barnard, glendale arts and culture exhibition
A view of the gallery at Adams Square Park. Photo by Renae Barnard.

A view of the gallery at Adams Square Park. Photo by Renae Barnard.

The Happiness You Deserve: A site specific installation at Adams Square Mini Park

Sarah Barnard June 2, 2021

Renae Barnard has been selected by the Glendale Arts and Culture Commissions to display a temporary, site specific installation in the historic Adams Square Mini Park Gas Station. This work will be on view to the public daily beginning August 24 until September 30, 2021.

The Happiness You Deserve is a temporary, fiber-based installation considering the unique location of this historic structure: a 1936 Streamline Moderne Gas Station that exists in a small and unexpectedly green, nature-abundant park within the city. Renae is known for her fiber-based work using upcycled and found materials to explore the network of interactions between environment, perception, and well-being. For this project, she is considering the ways in which the sculpture might engage with the space, contemplating illumination in the evening hours to draw continuous attention to the nature rich site. Through the process of creating the work, Renae will be working through ideas surrounding the connection of well-being and nature.

Salvia Blooming at Adams Square Mini Park in May 2021. Photo by Renae Barnard.

Salvia Blooming at Adams Square Mini Park in May 2021. Photo by Renae Barnard.

Renae Barnard is a multidisciplinary artist living and working in Los Angeles. Barnard received her Master of Fine Arts from Claremont Graduate University and her BA from California State University, Los Angeles. She has recently completed projects in cooperation with the National Immigration Law Center and the City of Santa Monica Department of Cultural Affairs. She is a recipient of the Sue Arlen Walker and Harvey M. Parker Memorial Fellowship, the Armory Center for the Arts Teaching Artist Fellowship, The Ahmanson Annual Fellowship, Lincoln Fellowship Award, and Christopher Street West Art and Culture Grant.

 

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About the Glendale Arts and Culture Commission and Adams Square Mini Park Project

The mission of Glendale Arts and Culture Commission is to enrich the human experience, consciously integrating arts and culture into the daily life of the people of Glendale. The Adams Square Mini Park project was completed by the City of Glendale to provide a green space in the middle of the business district for the densely populated Adams Hill neighborhood and to incorporate the historic 1936 Streamline Moderne Gas Station. The gas station is listed on the Glendale Register of Historic Resources.

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Tags fiber artist, fiber sculpture, fiber installation art, fiber work, fiber artists, fiber art, california fiber artist, fiber art exhibition, fiber exhibition, textile fiber, site specific fiber art, Los Angeles fiber artist, textile art, Textile Art, textile comission, textile arts los angeles, textile artist, textile sculpture, textile sculptures, textile art exhibition, site specific textile artwork, sustainable textile, custom textile art, female textile artists, recycled textiles, California textile artist, los angeles textile artist, los angeles textile arts, textile artwork, installation art, site specific art installation, california installation art, art installation los angeles, art installation, installation artist fiber, feminist sculpture, feminist art exhibition, feminist art, queer art, queer artists, queer art exhibition, in situ, art in situ, sculpture in situ, glendale CA, glendale, california sculptor, california, los angeles, los angeles art event, Los Angeles art event, Los Angeles Installation art, los angeles free art show, los angeles art show, glendale art show, glendale arts, glendale art exhibition, glendale arts and culture, glendale arts and culture exhibition, adams square, adams square mini park, adams square mini park gas station, adams square art installtion, adams square art installation, adams square art show, adams square free art show, renae barnard

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Oct 18, 2021
Oct 18, 2021
Love > Shelter : Sculpture, Bowerbirds and Gender Performance
Oct 18, 2021
Oct 18, 2021
Oct 18, 2021
Oct 18, 2021
Aug 27, 2021
Aug 27, 2021
Tricksters and Transformations: Textile Arts Los Angeles Exhibition
Aug 27, 2021
Aug 27, 2021
Aug 27, 2021
Aug 27, 2021
Aug 23, 2021
Aug 23, 2021
Opening Reception: The Happiness You Deserve at Adams Square Park
Aug 23, 2021
Aug 23, 2021
Aug 23, 2021
Aug 23, 2021
Aug 20, 2021
Aug 20, 2021
Fiber-based Artwork: Connections Between Environment, Perception, and Well-being.
Aug 20, 2021
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Jun 2, 2021
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The Happiness You Deserve: A site specific installation at Adams Square Mini Park
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