Dana Caldera

Author: Dana

  • Paper Works at Site:Brooklyn Gallery

    Paper Works at Site:Brooklyn Gallery

    I’m thrilled to share that two of my large paper and textile collages were accepted into Paper Works, an online juried exhibition by Julia Halperin at Site:Brooklyn Gallery. It’s exciting to be part of the programming at Site:Brooklyn and to be included in the thoughtful curation of paper work in contemporary at by Julia Halperin.

    Julia Halperin, juror, is a cofounder of the Burns Halperin Report and executive editor of artnet News 2017-2022.

    The exhibition is on view April 26, 2023 – May 26, 2023 online at sitebrooklyn.com.

    Excerpt from the Curatorial Statement by Julia Halperin

    In the art world, paper is often treated like a middle child—it’s underestimated and overlooked. But the material is one of the most versatile ones we have. As the works assembled here show, paper is far more than a tool for preparatory sketches. It can be the main event. 

    The artists included in this show use paper as raw material for sculpture and other three-dimensional works; they use it to document the everyday; they use it to explore unique cultural histories; and they use it as a means to imagine beautiful, sometimes monumental worlds.

    Historians disagree about the origins of paper, but many say it dates back to 200 BCE in China, where it was first used to wrap and preserve tea. From the very beginning, then, paper was used not only to record and retain, but also to make and assemble something new. 

    In this digital age, we touch paper less and less often. We read books on a Kindle, we write lists on our iPhone notes app, we use credit cards and Venmo instead of paper money. The artists whose works are assembled here remind us of paper’s tactile qualities, its versatility, as well as the distinct role it plays in countries ranging from Korea to Mexico. Allow them to take you on an adventure. 

    Julia Halperin, Paper Works Curatorial Statement

    After the introduction, Halperin’s writing takes us through each of nine “walls” of the online show, grouping the paper work by theme or material. My pieces are included in the final wall, Wall 9: Paper Collage.

    Wall 9: Paper Collage | Collage has a long history stretching back to the origins of Modernism, but each of these artists—Jim Zver, Dana Caldera, and Reinaldo Egusquiza—gives the form a contemporary twist of their own.

    Julia Halperin, Paper Works Curatorial Statement
  • Thoughts from January 2023

    Thoughts from January 2023

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    I want to start with a note to say thank you for being here. Thanks for reading. Thanks for supporting my studio and growth as an artist. I’ve found it hard to share about my artwork since mid-2022, and I realize now that it is because things are in a state of transition. My artwork is changing and what I want from my career is changing. The large fiber collage pieces I created in June unlocked something new in my artwork. I can feel the work resonating with me, and with others.

    It’s exciting. But it’s slow, too. I’m not sure how to transition to making large work in my current studio. I’m not sure who the new audience will be. I’m not sure how to fund it. I’m working it out, though. Stick around, I’m hopeful 2023 will be a good one.

    -DC

    PS. In today’s email, I’m sharing a few of the things I’m thinking about in relation to this new work. Sticking with the theme of change, I’m not sure what my studio emails will look like moving forward, but I love the idea of connecting you with the things that are inspiring and exciting me in the studio. 


    Elena del Rivero

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    This year I came across the work of Elena del Rivero. I am most drawn to her work with the dishtowel. She has been working with the dishtowel form since the 90s, including the work above made from handmade paper, pristine at first and then worn down on the floor of her studio before being reassembled into a storied paper dishcloth, embellished with hand stitching. 

    Elena del Rivero, [Swi:t] Home. Dishcloths, 2000-01.
    Stitches and mending on handmade and dirtied abaca paper with watermark.
    5 dishcloths. Each 292 x 381 cm.
    Installation views at The Drawing Center for Performance Paper, a project curated by Catherine de Zegher, July 2001.
    Photo: Cathy Carver

    I sourced the photo above from Rivers Institute for Contemporary Art & Thought, where the text titled “Nineteen Notes for Elena del Rivero’s Nineteen Flags“ by John A. Tyson, is an incredible, insightful companion to Elena del Rivero’s body of work. 

    Here is note #9. 

    “Del Rivero’s artworks rattle sabers with conventional accounts of modernism. Her series of monumental dishtowels emblazoned with geometric motifs and irregular splatters and smudges, “Letter from Home,” brings to the fore one of the repressed aspects of “high art”: paintings are really just stained swathes of fabric. Arguably, Clement Greenberg’s notion of “pictorial space,” the idea that a mark on a support yields an illusion of figure superimposed upon ground, is one final defense against seeing uncovered canvases for the materials they are made from. Del Rivero’s grids posit that dishtowel designs could possess this kind of illusionistic dimensionality when put in conversation with abstract canvases. In the context of del Rivero’s paintings, Greenberg’s affirmation, “thus a stretched or tacked-up canvas already exists as a picture—though not necessarily a successful one,” comes to define painting as the manipulation of cloth.”


    Martha Stewart and Fashion/Women’s Rights Timeline

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    When I downloaded this podcast to listen to, I had no idea how much connection I would find in it to themes I’m wondering about in my artwork and my life. Yes, the story of Martha Stewart is worth a listen, even without a deeper interest in craft, domestic work, and powerful women. 

    I was especially intrigued by this timeline that  Sarah Archer shared, which I’ve transcribed/cleaned up below. 

    1970

    50% of single women and 40% of married women are participating in the labor force 

    Jessica McClintock buys gunnysacks and begins producing prairie dresses

    Gloria Vanderbilt appears in a quilt extravaganza called Gloria the Great’s Patchwork Bedroom in the pages of Vogue

    1971

    Erica Wilson’s needlepoint show premieres on PBS 

    1972

    hobby lobby opens 

    1973

    Roe versus Wade is decided 

    Betty Friedan debates Phyllis Schlafly on TV

    Michael’s craft stores open 

    1974

    Little House on the Prairie premiers on NBC

    Women can apply for credit and their own names

    1976

    Yves Saint Laurent presents his peasant collection 

    1978

    Passage of the pregnancy discrimination act

    So what strikes you about this span of time?

    From the data points you’re giving, it feels like there’s a direct correlation between women gaining legal rights and the aesthetic of an imagined past domesticity becoming ascendant. 


    Louise Bourgeois’ fabric books

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    I was recently introduced to these illustrated, fabric books by Louise Bourgeois. I did not previously know that Louise Bourgeois worked with fabric in this way. The blog article Louise Bourgeois: A Flashback of Something that Never Existed, posted by Christina Costello, Louise Bourgeois Print Cataloguer, Department of Prints and Illustrated Books, is a great short read. 

    Here is an excerpt from the MOMA website:

    “Although she is best known for her sculptures, drawings, and prints, Bourgeois also made illustrated books (a format that she herself collected) from the late 1940s onward, incorporating her own texts and those of other authors. Fabric had deep personal associations for her, as she had spent her childhood living upstairs from her parents’ tapestry restoration workshop and then for years employed textiles in her sculptures and as the support for her prints and drawings. She had long used art as a means of exploring and exorcising her personal history, but this volume is unusually intimate: it is composed entirely of pieces of textiles she had worn or had saved since the 1920s, including nightgowns, scarves, hand towels, and table napkins from her wedding trousseau, monogrammed with her initials.”

    Thanks for reading! Until next time, Dana

  • Gathering What’s Tangible Group Exhibition

    Gathering What’s Tangible Group Exhibition

    Gathering whats tangible exhibition flyer

    In May 2020, my collage quilts were exhibited as part of Open MFA’s Group Exhibition, Gathering What’s Tangible. In the curatorial statement by Erica Reed Lee, she describes a trend she saw with artists turning to craft practices during the isolation of the pandemic. I can personally see this in my own work, and in the work of several of my artist friends. Perhaps we craved something tactile, or maybe it was the challenge of learning a new skill.

    Exhibition Description from the Open MFA Website

    Gathering What’s Tangible brings together Open MFA’s collective response to the pandemic in the form of craft. In March 2020, the pandemic caused Open MFA’s meetings to come to an abrupt stop. Zoom and virtual meetings were a poor substitute for the participatory and energetic events held prior to the pandemic. By fall 2020, Open MFA artists had quietly dispersed. During this time of isolation and anxiety, artists turned towards materiality–many incorporating craft for the first time–as a means of connection and comfort. Open MFA’s inaugural exhibition draws connections between these works and rekindles a community founded on tactile and playful discourse. This exhibition is curated by Open MFA artist Erica Reed Lee.

    Curatorial Statement by Erica Reed Lee

    Gathering What’s Tangible opened earlier this month at Flatland Gallery in Houston, Texas. I am incredibly excited about this group show, because it is my first exhibition as curator. Swimming in new waters, I was excited and nervous but kept it together.

    The origin of the exhibition, like many things, took place in 2020. Open MFA, a collective led by artists Hillaree Hamblin, Ryan Hollaway, Amanda Powers and myself, had originally booked the venue, Flatland Gallery, for another exhibition called “Collaborations”. The exhibition sought to bring artists together across disciplines to collaborate on new work. I pitched the idea to Dan, owner of Flatland, and we scheduled the opening for June 2020.

    With the emergence of the pandemic, we postponed the opening indefinitely. Occasionally life would feel safe, but then a surge of cases would hit. We didn’t host another meet-up until January 2022, and it was only then, nearly two years later, did we start up conversations again about a group exhibition.

    At our meetings, I noticed that many of us had experimented with craft and new techniques over the course of the pandemic. Amanda started crocheting plastic bags, and I began making artists’ books. Looking at Flatland Gallery, a Montrose bungalow, I thought about positioning the exhibition as a familial coming together–an opportunity to reconnect, share stories of creative resilience, and establish a strong, nurturing foundation for the collective going forward.

    By March, I was still consumed by this concept and proposed that I curate the show. The other Open MFA organizers agreed and offered their support (thank you!).

    From there, I reached out to artists and made inquiries about the work they had been making since 2020. In some cases, I made studio visits and met with artists one-on-one to select (and sometimes create!) work for the exhibition. This was the most exciting part of the curatorial process. I enjoyed seeing artists’ studios, discovering work in their archives, and listening to their stories. (Thank you to the artists who opened up their studios to me–it is perhaps one of the most generous gifts to share.)

    The writing for the exhibition began in March and evolved as the work came together. My thought process also expanded as I read Craft (Whitechapel: Documents of Contemporary Art) by Tanya Harrod and Thinking Through Craft by Glenn Adamson (Thank you, Hirsch Library!). Only when all of the work was dropped off at the venue did I have a formal curatorial statement. Organizing and installing the work was also more organic than I expected. As the work arrived, I adjusted, fielded responses, and made decisions on the spot. Going forward, I hope to have more experience so that I am not doing this the day before…

    Weaving, building, sewing, drawing, and mixing, artists found comfort and meaning in the process of learning and making tactile objects.

    Entering the exhibition from the from the front door, visitors will see three textile cherubs directly across the room, a bookcase to the left, and a small wooden table with a large mass of knitted sweaters and two knitted calendars on the wall to the right.

    In total, there are 30 sweaters in the pile. Jen Bootwala began making them in April 2020. Each one is distinct–a different pattern, a different set of colors. Bootwala found comfort and connection in the process of knitting. Working with yarn offers human touch, warmth, and purpose. The pile, however, reflects a period of confinement and anxiety. The knitted calendars hanging above the pile mark time and Bootwala’s feverish production. Normally Bootwala would have given sweaters such as these to loved ones, but the pandemic restricted this custom.

    Time, like yarn’s presence in the exhibition is a direct result of having made a studio visit with the artist. Before our visit together, I was familiar with Bootwala’s thesis work, having seen it in the UH MFA Thesis Exhibition, but I didn’t know any more about Bootwala’s practice or her experience during the pandemic. After we talked about the knitted works in the show and their commentary on graphic design, we talked about knitting more generally. She explained how she started making sweaters and challenging herself with more intricate patterns during the pandemic. We looked at different ways of presenting them in an exhibition. We also talked about a creating a new sweater: one that could not be worn or one that linked people together. Things were left undecided as Jen chose to think about it. A few days later, Bootwala presented the idea of the calendars and began knitting.

    The book shelves host Open Library, a collection of artists’ books made by the Open MFA community. In April 2022, I hosted three artists’ books events with Open MFA. At these events, I introduced the medium and encouraged artists to think about their experiences of home and community during the past two years. We then began making books–either collaboratively or independently. Intimate and narrative in nature, these books, brought together, create a collective history and reflect the community’s perseverance, spontaneity, and willingness to find joy. In contrast to the digitally mediated platforms we have come to depend on, this collection is a physical and tangible connection to shared and personal memory.

    Next to the bookshelves are three works by Dana Caldera. Books lay open and exposed–their pages torn from their spines. I placed these works next to the bookshelves to juxtapose creation and erasure/destruction of narratives.

    Hanging from the ceiling is a large graphic textile titled Separately Together. Six scraps of canvas are sewn together to create a “0” shaped flag. It is a bold yet meticulous collaboration. Positioned off the wall, the flag creates a dramatic shadow.  

    Separately Together is the only work that began prior to the pandemic. Alexandra Isabel Lechin and I began working on this piece in late February 2020 in preparation for the Collaborations exhibition. The graphic and visual effects were inspired by Lechin’s practice while the concept derived from my interests. I wanted to understand Texas’s history and the various states that had governed and excluded communities within its domain. Can we mend together its complex, murky histories to create a flag?

    The exhibition returns from expansive to personal narrative with Rachel Toombs’s Bread Crumbs: On the Path Home. A young girl, somewhat timid, stands surrounded by an antique frame centered in the middle of an array of mixed media pieces. A slew of fabric, layered materials, and color circle outside the frame. Bread Crumbs presents the artist’s journey back to herself. Collage became Toombs’s primary practice early in the pandemic. Cutting and layering, Toombs pieced together a personal narrative with play and spontaneity.

    Turning towards the wall opposite of the front door, the viewer finds The Lonely Cherubs: Apathy, Boredom and Relief above a box of curiosities by Mayra Huerta. Lorena Mitchell’s punch needling was perhaps the most surprising discovery during the curatorial process. An illustrator, Mitchell had previously only shown digital works at our Open MFA events. Like many other artists, however, she began playing with craft during the pandemic. The three cherubs depict the range of emotional responses to the pandemic: apathy, boredom, and relief.

    Mayra Huerta’s Curiosities I sits below the cherubs on a pedestal. The box of curiosities contains 12 unique objects made of latex, acrylic, twine, and clay. They are peculiar, surprising and bodily. They could fit in the palm of your hand. Beside the box of curiosities, a typewritten sheet describes the unique stories of each object.

    Curiosities I demonstrates Huerta’s recent use of both writing and ceramics. Huerta began writing regularly during the pandemic’s shutdown after creating a writing group with her friends. Creating and sharing short stories with one another, Huerta and her friends used writing as a way to connect with one another. Later, Huerta also began ceramic classes and started playing with that medium as well. While Huerta’s watercolors are also concerned with the flesh, Curiosities I offer a more intimate, tactile, and narrative experience. They feel precious and peculiar–much like our selves.

    The final piece in the entry room is a small framed piece by Cynthia Giron. The word “libre” (freedom) is flipped backward, and a butterfly flies upward (or is it falling down? It isn’t clear). The Butterfly Effect offers a colorful, coy prelude to the preceding works.

    In the following room, Hillaree Hamblin’s microscopic ink drawings expand outwards on the middle wall. Intricate and detailed, these line and dot drawings reflect the manic, yet beautiful, anxiety resulting from isolation and uncertainty. Like a cloud, they suspend themselves.

    Dana Caldera’s quilt series hangs across the main room’s eastern wall. This newer series of collage work is a continuation of her previous series with the significant addition of the found quilt pieces’ pillowy, cushioned surfaces. Caldera pulls from the remnants left by strangers to create soft yet rough stories that reach and connect the viewer to the human presence of people in the past. Handwriting and images peek through layers of color.

    Installation view. Dana Caldera, Collage Quilt Series, Mixed media on found handkerchief sewn to quilt or hand quilted, 2022, 16 x 16 inches. Photo: Amanda Powers.

    Hugo Pérez’s Loteria card masks frame the back doorway. Tezcatlipoca (Moon God) rises from the left, and Huitzilopochtli (Sun God) sets on the right. During the pandemic, Pérez hosted a small mask-making workshop for his close friends as way of reclaiming the masks they were wearing every day to protect themselves. Prompted by this exhibition, Pérez created a set of masks using Loteria cards which reminded him of his childhood and cultural background. The masks, one depicting the Sun God and at other the Moon God represent duality–a concept Pérez continues to explore in his practice.

    Opposite of Caldera’s quilts are Helen Sharpless’s sewn works on stretcher bars and Cynthia Giron’s works on panels. I met with Sharpless over coffee to learn about what led her to sewing and her choice to choose textiles over painting. I am always curious how women learn their crafts in today’s world (in contrast to mid-20th century). Was it passed on to them by their mother’s? How has it influenced their relationships? Does their craft play a role in their identity as daughter or mother?

    Unlike me (who just recently built up her confidence to use the sewing machine), Sharpless has been sewing since she was a young girl. She sat nearby as her mother sewed drapes and clothing. Enthusiastic, Sharpless started sewing thereafter. At Rice University, she created a sewn installation that flowed outwards from a house structure.

    During the pandemic, Sharpless cut, sewed, and experimented with joining fabrics to create abstract patterns with specific color palettes. At times, the works are large and droop slightly under the weight. In others, the fabric is taught and controlled. As the exhibition continues into the third room, the works become even more probing. In Altered Remnants, cloth pushes forward to create a shaggy appearance, while in New B and Silk Meditation, satiny fabric stretches across to create a mostly smooth surface.

    To the right of Sharpless’s Flag Dude, Cynthia Giron’s four mixed media works vibrate outwards. Given more time to reflect and address her own person health, Giron explored nostalgia and kitsch. The first painting, A gathering, presents a dinner table–a place associated with sharing and physical connection. The thing with Space is playfully investigates physical presence and emotional space in the form of a galaxy. FEEL LIKE and La Rata follow these two works by addressing personal reflection and family memory.

    In the final room, the visitor will find Amanda Power’s series of crocheted plastic bags, works that derive from the Houston freeze, and works by Sharpless and Lechin.

    $2/hour is an ongoing series by Powers. Using the craft technique of crochet, Powers loops together dollar signs from plastic bags–producing at most two per hour. During the pandemic, Powers was particularly concerned with the systems of power present in today’s global society and the social and environmental impact of our everyday actions. Transforming “trash to treasure” the objects evoke a since of resistance and communal empowerment against corporate negligence, while simultaneously questioning the value of money, the impact of over-consumption, and the individual’s role within the economic systems of society.

    Lost Time and Power Grids were made during the Houston Freeze (2021). Both works use electrical cords as material and subject matter. Tangled, woven, and twisted, cords are severed, stripped, and cut. Powers describes the works best: “Electrical cords serve as physical remnants of the virtual spaces that, for many of us, sourced our only means of connection and communication during the lockdown. Seen here in these two works—an iPhone charger, ethernet cable, headphones, an extension cable, and additional power cords—these objects are obsolete when electricity is no longer accessible. The cold, blue paintings archive electrical cords as something of the past, while the hand-woven, material objects carry our memories, mending broken structures and reimagining new forms”.

    Standing on a podium across Sharpless and Powers’s works, Lechin’s ceramic The Skin We Wear slips and slurps. It is a beautiful, organic black ceramic piece dotted with white. A later addition to the exhibition, I love how the form stands as both shadow and beacon for the tangible and bodily–encouraging viewers to relate the odd and unknown experiences of the exhibition to their own bodies.  

    When you visit this exhibition, I hope you see and experience the play, solace, and comfort as I did with these artists and these works. Each object is unique, vibrant and wonderfully human.

    I am incredibly grateful for these artists and the generosity they shared in the form of their work. Please continue to make, share, and celebrate what makes us human.

  • CAMHLAB Press Release

    CAMHLAB Press Release

    Contemporary Arts Museum Houston and Radom Capital announce curatorial and programming partnership to support artists-in-residence at new development Montrose Collective

    HOUSTON, TX (January 3, 2022)—Contemporary Arts Museum Houston (CAMH) and Radom Capital are excited to announce a new partnership that will directly support artists through an innovative residency embedded within the Montrose Collective development. A project of Radom Capital, Montrose Collective brings together 25 unique merchants, chefs, and wellness concepts to Houston in addition to multiple creative office tenants and the future home of the Freed-Montrose Neighborhood Library. As part of the creative vision for Montrose Collective, Radom Capital invited CAMH to expand its ongoing artist-in-residence program, CAMHLAB, which grants Houston-based contemporary artists in all media the space and support to develop new works and engage the public. The four artists and artist collectives selected for this inaugural iteration of CAMHLAB at Montrose Collective are Eepi Chaad, Two Star Symphony, Frame Dance, and Dana Caldera. The partnership seeks to celebrate the energy and dynamism of Montrose as an artistic neighborhood, and provides a unique platform for artist-driven experiences within a civic-scale development. 

    CAMH launched the CAMHLAB initiative in the Fall of 2020 in response to the ongoing effects of COVID-19 on artists in Houston, particularly the loss of performance and rehearsal space. Through both short-term and long-term residencies, CAMHLAB aims to safely connect artists and audiences, and to support the realization of new and timely works. These projects come at a time when artists are looking to connect, to gather safely, and share their work with the public. CAMH and Montrose Collective’s partnership provides a new opportunity for unexpected creative experiences and community engagement. CAMHLAB artist-in-residence Eepi Chaad says, “We are living through wild times and the world is a strange place these days. CAMHLAB is making space for artists to process and interpret. Each residency is like a capsule of a moment during an extraordinary period of acceleration in the human timeline.”

    Steve Radom, managing principal of Radom Capital, shares, “We created Montrose Collective as an expressive addition to Montrose, Houston’s most culture-rich, inclusive, and soulful neighborhood. Walking though Montrose inspires curiosity, wonder, and discovery. In the spirit of our neighborhood, we are honored to announce our curatorial and programming partnership with CAMH at the newly created CAMHLAB within Montrose Collective. CAMHLAB x MC is a light-filled gallery providing neighbors and visitors with access to an exciting and eclectic lineup of local artists curated by CAMH. The gallery is family-friendly and always free to the public. We hope you will come visit and support our local artists!”

    “CAMH is thrilled to partner with Montrose Collective and Radom Capital to expand the CAMHLAB residency program,” said CAMH Executive Director Hesse McGraw. “This is an opportunity for artists to move not just beyond the walls of the Museum, but to directly share their creative process with the public. We are excited to support these exceptional artists-in-residence and look forward to welcoming visitors to Montrose Collective—a public space that trusts artists!”

    The program at Montrose Collective commenced in mid-December with artist Eepi Chaad’s project, Soft Space, an installation that celebrates the soft surfaces we associate with our homes. Much like a home, the space changes with each visitor’s energy. Visitors are invited to learn about surface design, take part in the process of making, and engage with the transformed space created out of the textile squares we are all familiar with–handkerchiefs, bandanas, scarfs, afghans, throws, and security blankets. Soft Space provides a safe and welcoming space for visitors to create, heal, and connect with one another through a communal project.

    During the months of February and March, the artist collective Two Star Symphony will utilize the space to create new performance and sound works. The group is often inspired by the movement of dancers, silent film, and other visual mediums. Named one of the 15 Reasons to Visit Houston by the Houston Visitors and Convention Bureau, Two Star Symphony will offer regular open studio hours to genuinely connect with their audience and make their process visible. Future plans include a collaboration with puppeteer Afsaneh Aayani and composing new scores to short films from the seminal box set of early avant-garde American film, Unseen Cinema.

    The third group of artists-in-residence—Frame Dance—will present a project titled, The Family Mantra, an installation-based participatory performance that explores generational psychological shifts in the Houston community. The group aims to create an environment that will invite interaction with marbles, toy tops, pathways on the floor, pipe cleaner dolls to manipulate, and puppets. Frame Dance will host family dance parties with the goal of building bonding and creative expression. The Frame Dance MultiGen Ensemble—an all ages/all abilities group—will activate the space as well as their professional dance company. One of Frame Dance’s first performances took place at CAMH nearly ten years ago. Frame Dance believes that movement is a powerful pathway for healing. This residency will allow many families in Houston to express, share, and connect with each other in healthy and joyful ways.

    The final project in this inaugural round of Montrose Collective CAMHLAB residencies comes from artist Dana Caldera and is titled From Paper to Fabric. With this project, Caldera will expand on her layered, collage-based artwork by removing the constraints of a traditional stretched canvas, wooden board, or paper backing to explore the intersection of quilt and collage. An important component of this work is a community sewing circle event, which aims to offer a place for community, organizing for political or social causes, and education that is open to everyone. Caldera’s residency embraces the artist/caretaker role in order to model a family-friendly environment that welcomes children and ensures they are safely included in all events.

    Visit CAMH.ORG/CAMHLAB for more information regarding these artists, their process, and in-person and/or virtual programs for each of these CAMHLAB projects over the next several weeks.

    About Contemporary Arts Museum Houston

    Contemporary Arts Museum Houston (CAMH) presents extraordinary, thought-provoking arts programming and exhibitions to educate and inspire audiences nationally and internationally. Established in 1948, CAMH is one of the oldest non-collecting contemporary art museums in the country, and is internationally known for presenting pivotal and landmark work by artists recognized as the most important of the 20th and 21st centuries. CAMH’s mandate is to be present, to connect artists and audiences through the urgent issues of our time, and to adventurously promote the catalytic possibilities of contemporary art. CAMH’s programming, both in and beyond the Museum, is presented free to the public, and advocates for artists’ essential role in society.
     

    About CAMHLAB

    CAMHLAB is an ongoing artist-in-residence initiative that gives the Museum to artists and supports them working within, and in partnership with, CAMH to develop new work and ideas. Through both short-term residencies and long-term collaborations with artists, CAMHLAB offers critical and early-stage direct support of artists’ process and production of new work. CAMHLAB residencies seek to directly connect artists and audiences through unexpected and unforgettable experiences of contemporary art.

    About Radom Capital

    Radom Capital is a diversified, award-winning real estate development and investment firm based in Houston, Texas. Radom Capital aspires to combine community, culture, and commerce in all of their projects. Their work is differentiated by enduring spaces, long-term relationships, and solving complex real estate problems in an effort to catalyze economic revitalization and growth in each of the communities they work in.

    About Montrose Collective

    Montrose has been the artistic heartbeat of Houston for the last century and Montrose Collective has been created to embrace that energy and inclusiveness. With several public seating vignettes, it invites its neighbors to be embraced by lush patio landscaping woven throughout the center of the project. Montrose Collective brings together 25 unique merchants, chefs and wellness concepts to Houston, in addition to multiple creative office tenants and the future home of the Freed-Montrose Neighborhood Library.

  • Echoes of Yesterday

    Echoes of Yesterday

    My mixed media painting, Records of a Life Lived, (2021, private art collection) is featured in the book, Echoes of Yesterday, An Art Book by Photo Trouvée Magazine. The book, written by Juliana Naufel and Twiggy Boyer, is a collection of contemporary collage artwork, inspired by found photos.  

    Echoes of Yesterday, An Art Book by Photo Trouvée Magazine by Juliana Naufel and Twiggy Boyer, was released on December 17, 2021. You can purchase the book at this link.

    Read more about Echoes of Yesterday:

    Echoes of yesterday features a curated collection of contemporary artworks inspired by found or family photographs of the past. As you flip through the pages of this book, you will discover the unique ways in which 84 international artists transform lost memories into works of art. This book is for all of us who share a passion for nostalgia and a fascination for the ways in which memories inspire creativity. 

  • Dana Caldera’s ‘A Taste of the Seasons’ at Sweetgreen MKT Heights

    Dana Caldera’s ‘A Taste of the Seasons’ at Sweetgreen MKT Heights

    I am delighted to share that my artwork is now part of Sweetgreen’s collection of emerging artists and on view permanently at the Sweetgreen MKT Heights location in Houston, Texas. Sweetgreen is known for it’s seasonal and locally sourced ingredients and super tasty salads. It’s also known for exceptional design and artwork.

    Dana Caldera artwork at Sweetgreen MKT Heights

    This Architectural Digest article from 2018 explains why Sweetgreen continues to focus on design and artwork with the same care and attention to detail as it does the food. Sweetgreen’s founders want the design to be as refreshing as the salads. And as more Sweetgreen locations open up, they unveil more incredible collaborations with artists and architects.

    ”Because we have a very clean aesthetic, it’s a great canvas to showcase art,” Jammet says. A big part of Sweetgreen’s ethos is local sourcing, and this supply-chain strategy is echoed in its work with (often local) artists.

    Salad With a Side of Style: Why Sweetgreen is Investing in Local Design, by Hadley Keller, Architectural Digest

    For this project, I created a 4 canvas series titled, A Taste of the Seasons, and featuring found paper collage elements sourced from my collected recipes and cookbooks. The artwork is made with mixed media, including pastel, graphite, acrylic, and the collage elements.

    Dana Caldera artwork at Sweetgreen MKT Heights

    In April 2021, the Sweetgreen MKT Heights location opened in Houston (Sweetgreen’s third Houston location at the time), featuring artwork by Dana Caldera. The two previous Houston Sweetgreen locations include Sweetgreen Rice Village, featuring artwork by Lanecia Rouse Tinsley, and Sweetgreen Downtown, featuring artwork by Max Manning.

    Sweetgreen works in partnership with Tappan Collective to bring commissions by emerging artists to each Sweetgreen location.

    Blog post image for dana caldera’s art at Sweetgreen MKT heights
  • Caldera Artwork Featured in ‘Collage Care’ Book

    Caldera Artwork Featured in ‘Collage Care’ Book

    My mixed media collage, Space Between the Branches, (2019, Part of the Doug + Laurie Kanyer art collection) is featured in the book, Collage Care: Transforming Emotions and Life Experiences with Collage. The book, written by Laurie Kanyer, unpacks the practice of creating collage for emotional well-being, much like visual journaling. I start all of my Art I classes with a collage project for many of the reasons outlined in this book.

    Collage Care: Transforming Emotions and Life Experiences with Collage by Laurie Kanyer, MA was released on July 1, 2021. You can purchase the book at this link.

    Read more about Collage Care below:

    Are you looking for a way to help to transform your emotions, feelings, and life experiences? Are you ready to invest in your self-care?

    Collage Care: Transforming Emotions and Life Experiences with Collage will help!

    Art using collage is the ideal tool to transform your life by breaking through your emotions and experiences. Collage Care will show you how collage, a remarkable art form, will become a best friend, a trusted advisor, and a great problem solver. Furthermore, Collage Care demonstrates how using collage offers ways to eliminate your trials and tribulations so you can embrace your joys.

    Collage is for everyone, is accessible, and is nearly free. It is a swift way to get to the heart of a concern. The author of Collage Care, Laurie Kanyer, MA, knows how collage helps, as she witnessed remarkable miracles using collage for 35 years in the classroom and as a therapist.

    Collage Care offers:

    • 125 ways, called Gems, describing how collage helps solve problems, manage feelings, and build self-esteem. 
    • Tools to regulate your emotions, know your True Self, reduce the pressure of your inner critic, and calm your mind.
    • Ways to use collage to improve your relationships and strengthen your communication style. 
    • Over 150 full color, fine art collages offering inspiration and encouragement. This book is both a healing tool and a fine art book! 
    • Reflections—real life testimonies—from people all over the world whose lives were transformed using collage. 
    • Essays from experts in the fields of art, social work, and art history that further document the value of collage as a premiere tool for transformation.

    Collage Care is also a perfect book for those in the helping professions, counselors, teachers and more. Collage Care is useful for historical art research and the historical implications of collage on emotional well-being.

  • Dana Caldera: Are These Portraits?

    Dana Caldera: Are These Portraits?

    After years of working with found photographs, I found myself drawn to the memories one chooses to keep: correspondence, recipes, books, and notes, the personal records of a life lived. In this collection, these mementos are combined with abstract marks of mixed media, built up in layers over days and weeks. The details unfolded like a conversation as I worked, revealing themselves one layer at a time, much like getting to know someone. I hope that viewing the work feels like the same unraveling of a complex visual story, one that is at once familiar and strange.

    Visual Vocabulary

    As I worked, I found that a consistent visual vocabulary began to surface. The colors of the work are drawn from the delicate greys and ochres of the aged paper and the black and blue colors of ink, with some additional warming pinks, peaches, and oranges. The marks are controlled scribbles, made with conté or pastel, sometimes loose and other times confined to a shape or overlapping a piece of found paper. I’ve added some new textures to this work, embracing the unpredictability of acrylic ink pooled and left to dry flat, and the playful texture of the oil pastel scrawled on the raw paper, often creating negative space shapes.

    Themes

    Water, time, and tension emerged as important themes in this work. The use of water was essential to the handmade paper process (the first pieces I made when imagining this body of work) and the abstraction made with the pooled acrylic ink. Working with water in this way was unpredictable and brought the passage of time to the forefront of the work because I had to rest between layers as the water dried. There was an element of relinquishing control. Water represents strength, steadfastness, and cleansing. Over time, a little bit of water is a powerful force.

    Time is ever-present. I’m creating new artwork using old material, the layering process of creating the work is time-intensive, and the art needs time to rest between each layer. This gives the artwork a chance to breathe and I get a chance to respond to how it forms. Time is a necessary component of working with the water and adhesives in layers.

    As I worked, I was thinking about tension and balance. The construction of new artwork is born from the destruction of the old primary material. The build-up of texture and collage is balanced with the negative space of the simpler compositions. Other tensions present are delicate with playful, new with old, recognition with anonymity.

    Questions

    Are these timelines?
    In a way they are, I’m creating the work from back to front, layering in collage material and mixed media as a new record of this time.

    Are these portraits?
    If I’m not using the likeness of a figure or a traditional face, can they still capture the humanness of a portrait? I’m working with found papers that evoke a poignant nostalgia, and I combine them sometimes haphazardly, mixing stories, mixing years.

    Who’s story is this?
    I’m both honoring the story of the original found object and reducing it to the basic formal elements of color, texture, shape, or line as with any other art media. This work is about all of us and none of us. A combination of abstract and playful mark making with distinct humanness and approachability because we see something of ourselves in the found collage material.

  • What Does Giclee Even Mean? A Guide to Understanding Fine Art Prints Lingo

    What Does Giclee Even Mean? A Guide to Understanding Fine Art Prints Lingo

    Art prints, fine art prints, giclee prints, archival prints, limited edition prints, monoprints, relief prints, photography prints…I could go on and on. “Prints” is a word we use often in the art world and it can have vastly different meanings. In this blog post I will break down the lingo that artists use to describe fine art prints, and what you should know as an informed collector. Let’s dive in, shall we?

    First, there are two main buckets that can be used to describe art prints: reproductions and originals.

    Reproductions

    Reproductions are what you see most often for sale online or in retail stores. Prints, art prints, fine art prints, giclee prints, or archival prints are all terms used to describe printed reproductions. Putting terms like “art” or “fine art” in front of prints doesn’t necessarily mean anything, but it likely signifies the quality of the print. I use the term “fine art” when I refer to my prints because I am printing giclee prints that are sourced with archival inks and luxurious, archival paper. I also use it to indicate that the original image that is being reproduced was a piece of original fine art.

    Archival:

    Archival is a broad term that indicates that the artwork is made with materials that are “suitable for long term contact with important objects, safe and stable to museum and library standards” (source). It is important for artwork to be archival, meaning that the art will not yellow or deteriorate over time. It’s recommended that artists and conservators use archival inks, papers, adhesives, and plastics in artwork. You can read more about what archival means for art materials in this informative blog post.

    Giclee:

    Giclee printing is a term referring to a professionally produced print using inkjet technology with archival inks, archival paper, and color quality control. The word “giclée” comes from the french word for “nozzle” (giclur) because of the wide format spray of the inkjet printing process (source). A giclee print is now considered the standard for high quality fine art printing.

    Originals

    The term “original art prints” refers to art made with traditional printmaking techniques. These can include, but are not limited to, etchings, lithographs, woodcut, linocut, silkscreens (seriographs), drypoints, collagraph, aquatints, or mezzotints. For each of these prints, the artist has to physically create each print from the matrix. The matrix is the block, screen, or plate that has been carved or etched, so that it holds the image that will be printed. The matrix is usually made by hand.

    Printmakers usually create their work in a series where there are a limited number of prints made of the same design. So while each print is technically one-of-a-kind because it is run by hand using a printing press, hand rolled ink, and the matrix, it will be one-of-many prints bearing the same images. Prints made in a series come numbered in this style 1/50, 2/50…50/50, indicating their place in the series. Here is a wonderful resource on how a printmaker should label their series, including proofs and other hand-modified prints.

    Monoprints are a unique form of traditional printmaking because they are truly one of a kind. Monoprints or monotypes are typically made when the artist applies ink or paint to a non-porous surface, like plexiglass, and then creates a print from that. Only one print can be pulled using this technique.

    Open Edition vs. Limited Edition Art Prints

    Artists have the option to create either open edition or limited edition prints. With open edition, the number of prints that can be created and sold are unlimited. Limited edition prints are just that, limited. The artist will select a number of prints for the image and cannot create more prints. This creates a scarcity, and therefore an artist will charge more for a limited edition print (source).

    Traditional printmaking series are by default a limited edition. When you see a label like 1/50, 2/50…50/50. Then you know that the size of the edition is 50.

    Some caveats to limited edition fine art prints:

    Artists can open a new run of limited edition prints of the same image, but they will typically change something, such as the substrate or a color so that the new run of prints is different. Artists will also make prints as part of a limited edition that are called artist’s proofs. There is no limit on the number of artist’s proofs, and they are not counted in the edition total, but they can be sold.

    Digital 2D Artwork Prints

    The terminology for reproduction prints can be applied to digitally created artwork. The artist can choose to print in an open or limited edition and select the quality of the inks and colors that are used. In this case, the digital file is considered the original work of art.

    Photography Art Prints

    In fine art photography, an original photograph used to refer to the photograph that was made directly from the negative. However now, with the rise in digital photography, original photographs are more like original prints, where they are printed in series. A photographer may also choose to print their photographs as open edition reproductions. You can read more about original photographs vs. reproductions in this informative blog post.

    Thoughts, questions, or comments? Leave them below and I’ll do my best to answer them!

    PS. My fine art prints shop is opening on September 5! In the meantime, you can shop originals directly from the studio here.

  • The Doug+Laurie Kanyer Art Collection

    The Doug+Laurie Kanyer Art Collection

    I am delighted to announce my collages: Space Between The Branches and Memory Lane #3, were selected for inclusion in the Doug + Laurie Kanyer Art Collection. 

    The Collection

    This Collection is one of very few private collections of exclusively collage in the world. The Collection has holdings from135 artists residing in 33 countries. The intention of the collectors is for the entire Collection to be eventually donated to an institution yet to be determined. The focus of the collection is to make a historical record of collages created by collagists from 1980 to the present.

    The Collages

    These works were inspired by my return to the studio after a break to have my first child. Using the materials that I was comfortable with: collage, paint, and mark-making graphite, I pushed myself to explore three new sizes and styles of collages, focusing on negative space and creating movement through the composition.

    art
    Space Between The Branches
    10 x 12 inches
    Mixed media (acrylic, gouache, collage, matte medium) on original found photograph mounted on original paper studio mat
    2019
    Collage Exploration Collection

    Space Between The Branches is one of two mixed-media collage pieces created with mostly paint and collage on top of a found photograph. A family home sits on a hill in the distance surrounded by trees. The empty field and added color and collage pieces move around the foreground, representing the cycle of nature and the passing of time.

    Memory Lane #3
    10 x 7 inches
    Mixed media (gouache, graphite, acrylic marker, collage, matte medium, found photograph) on paper
    2019
    Collage Exploration Collection

    Memory Lane #3 is part of a series of 5 delicate, mixed-media collage pieces featuring a clipping from an original found photograph. I used deliberate gouache pools, bold collage scraps, and small marks of color to create an abstract setting that tells a story of the person in the photograph.

    Learn More

    To find out more about Doug + Laurie Kanyer Art Collection follow them @kanyerartcollection on Instagram, Doug + Laurie Art Collection on Facebook and do go see their website Kanyerartcollecion.com.