Intended Audience
Artist Talk by Michelle Kohler: Letters
Monday, March 2, 4:45-5:45 p.m., Glendening Annex
Michelle Kohler ’01 is a conceptual artist working in Washington DC. Using the constraints of domesticity, her work emerges at the intersection of art and everyday life. Through text, installation, and performance, Michelle examines the distance between the numinous and the mundane, self and other. Inspired by 17th Century tantric paintings, she uses a typewriter to transcribe spiritual texts into contemplation forms. The mechanical up and down, left and right motion of the typewriter frames her interest in non-dualism. Practicing the ideals set out in texts, she playfully seeks boredom and discomfort as opportunities for creative intervention. Through collaborations, Michelle interrupts accepted stories and habits, often trying to embody the experience of another person.
Michelle received a Masters of Teaching (MAT) in Art from the Corcoran College of Art and Design and graduated from St. Mary’s College of Maryland with a BA in Art. For the past 5 years, Michelle has been a resident artist in motherhood. As an ARIM artist she has collected a year's worth of number 2 pencils from the playground, gone hunting with her father, and published The Bhagavad Gita Typestracts, the complete Bhagavad Gita written in visual form. She is a decorative painter, a certified yoga therapist, and a former DC Public School teacher. Michelle's work has been shown at Gradient Project Space in Thomas, WV. She is the beneficiary of the 2011 McCarthy Tall Tales Prize, a geodesic dome owner, and spent her honeymoon hiking 1000 miles on the Continental Divide Trail.
Artist website: http://michellekohler.net/bio