Kiki Smith Analysis

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Kiki Smith is a virtually self-taught West German-born American artist who commonly uses a wide range of themes including AIDS, feminine domesticity, life, death, and human relationships to animals, and nature in her pieces. Kiki began to catch the eye of the New York public in 1988 at a gallery in New York City where she first displayed some of her well known graphic sculptures of the human body. While Smith is more well known for her graphic sculptures of the human body, she is also a highly recognized photographer, printmaker, drawer, and painter.
Kiki Smith was born on January 18, 1954, in Nuremberg Germany. However, she did not stay in Europe for long, Smith and her family moved to the United States in 1955 and settled in South Orange, …show more content…

This show helped bring the people of New York’s attention towards Kiki, but a show in 1988 at Joe Fawbush Gallery is what really caught New York’s public’s attention. The show at Joe Fawbush Gallery is where Smith first began exhibiting her artworks of the human body, including an art piece where she displayed bottles full of semen, blood, urine, and other bodily fluids; as well as establishing herself as a fearless modern artist not afraid to express what she wanted to express. However, an exhibition in 1990 she did for the Project Rooms at the Museum of Modern Art is where Kiki began receiving significant attention for her …show more content…

The director of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Thomas P. Campbell himself called one of her sculptures, “Tale”, “simply disgusting”. The beeswax wax sculpture illustrates a woman crawling along the ground with a tail of feces following behind her. Kiki Smith explains that is never her intention to disgust or provoke anyone with her art, but the piece represents humiliation as well as carrying personal internal

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