271. Alicia Piller: Independent Artist

Published: Oct. 1, 2021, 4 p.m.

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Independent artist Alicia Piller, stopped by to talk with Nancy about her exhibition, Unearthed: Time Keeping Mound City, at Craft Alliance, which runs through October 23rd.

Los Angeles based artist, Alicia Piller was born and raised in Chicago and received her \\xa0Bachelors in both Fine Arts (Painting) & Anthropology from Rutgers University in 2004. While \\xa0working in the fashion industry; living a decade in NYC and three and a half years in Santa Fe, \\xa0NM, Piller cultivated her distinctive sculptural voice. Continuing to expand her artistic practice, \\xa0Alicia completed her MFA focused on sculpture and installation from Calarts in May of 2019. \\xa0

As a method to locate the root of human histories, Alicia merges the new and discarded, \\xa0experimenting with a wide range of materials to construct large scale works that mimic forms \\xa0of cellular biology. Piller envisions historical traumas, both political and environmental, through \\xa0the lens of a microscope. Piller\\u2019s mixed media practice is as much about materiality as it is \\xa0about content. Attempting to reconcile questions about the current state of our times; she \\xa0works on a macro/micro level, breathing life into materials that have been removed from their \\u2018natural\\u2019 environment. Manipulating things like resin and latex balloons (stemming from her \\xa0background as a clown); each work becomes a biological unfolding of time, examining the \\xa0energy around wounds societies have inflicted upon themselves and others.

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Alicia Piller

Alicia Piller investigates place. She believes a city, a country, or a specific location can be seen as an object that can be held, explored, dissected and mended back together. \\u201cTracing humanity\\u2019s roots has always been at the forefront of my interests,\\u201d states Piller. \\u201cMost recently, focusing on my own roots and the Americana in general.\\u201d Piller\\u2019s studio practice focuses on one place and dives deep into how the earth connects with humanity and how humans connect with the earth. Centering her investigations on history, Piller draws references from both the political and environmental traces of a city. When invited to have a solo exhibition at Craft Alliance, St. Louis became the catalyst for her work.\\xa0

Piller has always been fascinated with fossils, minerals and botanicals. These earthly elements are where she begins her studies of a new place. Much like a hidden gem, St. Louis started to reveal herself to Piller; stories of how we interacted with the land began to unfold, and tales of struggles and resilience revealed themselves. In this exhibition, Piller leads us on a journey starting at the Cahokia Mounds, speaking to the impact this early civilization had on our history. Identifying native botanicals, fossils and land formations, Piller weaves this imagery into her multi-material sculptures.\\xa0

Piller examines St. Louis race relations in relation to the natural landscape of the region. This juxtaposition is the root of her work. \\u201cThis show is meant to get people to think about the intricacy of existence, to examine and discover the connectivity of the past to the present,\\u201d Piller explains. \\xa0 \\u201cHighlighting the St. Louis area chronologically through photographic imagery and other mixed media materials, I want the viewers to touch down on moments in time. Examining the inhabitants of a Missouri once covered by ocean, look back to ancient civilizations wiped out and forgotten; recognizing colonial invasion and its effects on society, while presenting a sense of resilience from an American city through tragedy and activism.\\u201d

Piller\\u2019s work brings us through the creation of Mound City, to the Dred Scott case, the St. Louis 1917 race riots, Delmar Divide, Mike Brown, and ends with hopeful voices of current activists. Her work moves us through the past and the present, reminding us that we are connected to the earth by paralleling history with native botanicals from the area. We are connected to each other and to the land. \\u201cThis work is a moment of hope and growth, an explosion of positive energy and transformation. From each work, I want people to get a feeling of movement, a feeling of progression, a \\xa0feeling of time expanding and moving. In this way, I want the works to feel like organisms shifting and changing, shedding their skin."

Remains. Tectonic Forces. Vanishing Seas.\\xa0\\xa0

Pedals Fall.\\xa0 Seasons Change.

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Podcast Curator and Editor: Jon Valley with Technical Support by Mid Coast Media

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