lauren cardenás
Lauren is interested in objects that often go unnoticed and yet are interacted with on a regular basis. Things like sheets, cheese slices, or a toner printer. She’s interested in the relationships that people have with the mundane things that fill our lives, and how that context is altered when they’re pulled from the expected habitats and contexts. Using a mix of traditional and experimental printmaking techniques she is able to add a layer of history and intrigue to the items.
'“Within my practice, I have two modes of making: I either utilize traditional labor-intensive printmaking methods such as lithography or letterpress, or I use the immediate nature of digital applications to capture moments within a static picture. Each process has its limitations, and I attempt to push those constraints as far as possible. Within both processes, I can achieve severe abstraction. Yet, the main difference between the digital applications and traditional print processes is the act of play I can experience within the digital scanner. There is less risk of not having to be concerned with the laborious process of lithography or letterpress.” - Cardenás
Currently, Lauren is also working through her own “bifurcated” history as a Latinx (Mexican American) individual. She’s interested in the works of Hal Foster, Tacita Dean, Felix Gonzales-Torres, and others, fascinated by their use of archiving as a tool for art-making. Through the medium of the mundane and unconventional print surface, she is able to evoke feelings of loss. In doing so, she seeks to remove the precious quality of these works in order for them to move beyond their art objecthood to something more accessible.
Cardenás is currently an Assistant Professor of Printmaking at Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge. She has earned her MFA in Visual Art, with a concentration in Print Media and Book Arts from Washington University Sam Fox School of Design & Visual Art in St. Louis. She has also earned her Printer Training Program Certificate from the Tamarind Institute in Albuquerque, New Mexico.
Artist Member since 2022
MFA IN VISUAL ARTS, WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY
SAM FOX SCHOOL OF DESIGN & VISUAL ART IN SAINT LOUIS
BA IN FINE ART, SOUTHWESTERN UNIVERSITY, GEORGETOWN, TX
Four Color Lithograph with letterpress
30" x 24"