Alma Louise Visscher & Taryn Kneteman
Secret Growing, 2020
Taiessa’s reflections on this work can be found here
Live studio visit recording available below
“Secret Growing” - the title of our most recent collaborative work - comes from a journal entry by the Swedish artist and mystic, Hilma af Klint:
"The phenomenon we are trying to explain is truly bewildering. What is this phenomenon, you ask? Well, beloved, it is that which we want to call the secret growing. How often have we heard you say that everything is futile, that nothing comes of all your labours. Yet like amorphous buds your endeavors sprout in all directions. You see everything as formless and you forget that this is a sign of life."
- Hilma af Klint, September 16, 1903.
Our collaborative practice is an inquiry into the living, shifting, and changeable nature of shared resources and collective making, both with each other and with the public. Our collaborative and individual practices intertwine as flexible systems of creation. Alma brings a background in textiles, low-relief sculpture, and natural dyes and inks. Her work considers the complex ecologic and socio-political history of materials. Taryn is fascinated with surfaces and material transformation in everyday rituals and domestic spaces. She brings a background in printmaking, video, mold-making, and casting.
amiskwaciwâskahikan (Edmonton), where we make our work, has a two-century long colonial history of extractive enterprises focused on the river valley of kisiskâciwanisîpiy (the North Saskatchewan River). We may be accustomed to the river valley being a public park, but in the 1950s private residences were built on the banks of the river in the area currently known as Buena Vista Park. Yorath House is the only remaining private residence. It opened to the public as a city facility in Fall 2019, and we were the first artists in residence inhabiting the second-floor artist studio. We are sharing here two series of works created during our residency.
The first series is titled "Somewhere Near the End of the World.” Galvanized steel shapes stretched with silk are inspired by the forms of decorative window privacy screens which delimit the border between public and private spaces. Using marbling techniques, handmade inks, and silk dyes we painted abstract patterns on the shapes, which are supported by carved soap and concrete objects. Some of the pieces have hole patterns indexed from partially-eaten leaves collected from the tended flower areas surrounding Yorath House. We used incense to burn away the shadows cast by the hole patterns. The title takes its name from the series of concrete pillars - relics of Keillor Road that slumped into the river valley - visible across the river from Yorath House.
The second series called "Hand to carry" takes cues from infrastructure, monoliths, and land art, scaled down to be palm-sized. During our walks we collected small stones from the riverbank. We polished and incorporated them into sculptural rings created out of vintage brass curtain eyelets. While developing these pieces we looked at modernist jewelry of the 1950s and 60s, Atomic Age home décor, and undersea coral formations. The small stones and rocks are currently of no commercial value, but were gathered from the riverside site previously host to gold, then coal, then gravel extraction.
These sculptures adorn the present moment and - we hope - question the process of collecting, extracting, and valuing materials.
Being in the river valley during the change of seasons surrounded us with the activities of park-goers and canine companions, seagulls, squirrels, coyotes, woodpeckers, trees, and grasses. Even while familiar rhythms of life are upended by the pandemic, amorphous buds continue to grow.
Somewhere Near the End of the World
Hand to carry
Secret Growing
Image Description & Additional Information
1 -5. Taryn Kneteman and Alma Louise Visscher, “Somewhere Near the End of the World,” 2020, Silk fabric, handmade ink, charcoal ink, silk paint, graphite, marbling dye, galvanized steel, cast concrete, carved soap, found objects, incense, dimensions variable.
6 - 10. Taryn Kneteman and Alma Louise Visscher, “Hand to carry,” 2020, Vintage brass curtain eyelets, vintage gloves, stones, clay, and fabric ink, dimensions variable.
11- 12 . Taryn Kneteman and Alma Louise Visscher “Secret growing,” 2020, Fieldstone niche, riverbank clay, stones, dried flower, dimensions variable.
Alma Louise Visscher (b. 1986 in the unceded traditional territory of the Semiahmoo, Katzie, Kwikwetlem, Kwantlen, Qayqayt and Tsawwassen First Nations / Surrey BC) creates fabric-based installations, soft sculptures, and drawings that examine material culture, soft architecture, and the language of abstraction through a feminist lens. Her work has been shown throughout North America, as well in Iceland and Germany: Sweet Lorraine Gallery (Brooklyn), Kimura Gallery (Alaska), and included in the 2020 Canadian Biennial of Fibre Art (Idea Exchange, Cambridge ON) as well as in Future Station, the 2015 Biennial of Alberta Art (Art Gallery of Alberta). She is thankful for support from Alberta Foundation for the Arts, The Edmonton Arts Council, and the Canada Council for the Arts. As both artist, teacher and cultural worker, Alma has focused on supporting more accessible art programs, and with those using art as part of their mental health and wellness journey: She has worked with a wide variety of government agencies and non-profit organizations: teaching classes and leading workshops at day programs, continuing care centres, and with employment and youth support services.
Taryn Kneteman (b. 1989 in amiskwacîwâskahikan / Edmonton) is a visual artist preoccupied with material transformation. She documents moving bodies and changes of state with sculpture, video, and printmaking, to consider the meaning of “wellness” as an embodied utopia where the curation of self and products promises control or escape.
Kneteman holds a BFA from the University of Alberta and has exhibited work at the Art Gallery of Alberta (Edmonton AB), Antimatter [media art] festival (Victoria BC), Walter Phillips Gallery (Banff AB), and SNAP Gallery (Edmonton AB), as well as internationally. She was an artist in residence at Common Opulence 2 (Demmitt AB), Banff Centre for Arts and Creativity (Banff AB), and Druckvereinigung Bentlage (Rheine, Germany). Most recently she was an artist in residence at Yorath House Artist Studio and Mitchell Art Gallery (Edmonton AB) in collaboration with Alma Louise Visscher. She lives and works in Edmonton, in Treaty 6 territory.