Livien Yin

Livien Yin is an artist working primarily in sculpture and photo-based practices. Yin examines artifacts that unsettle the distribution of power among humans and the natural resources we strive to control. Her recent projects center on the imperial legacies of botanical expeditions, guano harvesting and the Chinese coolie trade. Yin received her BA from Reed College and her MFA from Stanford University. She has been awarded a 2019-2020 Graduate Fellowship at Headlands Center for the Arts, the 2019 American Austrian Foundation/Seebacher Prize for Fine Arts and the 2019 Anita Squires Fowler Memorial Award in Photography. Yin lives and works in Berkeley, California.

www.livienyin.com

Reinterpretation of the Wardian case, a 19th century transport container used by botanist Robert Fortune to smuggle 20,000 tea plants from China to plantations in India.

Reinterpretation of the Wardian case, a 19th century transport container used by botanist Robert Fortune to smuggle 20,000 tea plants from China to plantations in India.

Laura Lappi

Laura Lappi is interested in observing and examining how architecture and spatial environments influence our perceptions and affect reality; in particular, her focus is on the experience and emotional charge of different places and the fluid boundaries between reality and fiction. Her sculptural practice explores the relationship between physical spaces, man-made structures, and the human mind - the psychogeography of places. Lappi has studied at the AKI Academy of Art & Design in the Netherlands and in the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. Her work has been exhibited widely in solo and group shows internationally, including at Riihimäki Art Museum, Galleria Uusi Kipinä, and Galleria Titanik in Finland; Galleri Vest and SÍM Gallery in Reykjavik, Iceland; Kunstpodium T, Twente Biennale, Re:Rotterdam International Art Fair in The Netherlands; Supermarket Art Fair in Stockholm, Sweden; Lorimoto Gallery, Trestle Gallery, AC Institute and Knockdown Center in New York, and The Yard exhibition space in Colorado Springs. Lappi has participated at numerous residencies, including Yaddo in Saratoga Springs, SÍM in Reykjavik and Vermont Studio Center in Johnson. She has been awarded grants from the Art in the Parks: Alliance for Flushing Meadows Corona Park, Alfred Kordelin Foundation, The Queens Council on the Arts, Finnish Cultural Foundation, Frame Contemporary Art Finland and Arts Promotion Centre Finland. Her recent fellowships include the Bronx Museum of the Arts AIM fellowship program and New York Foundation for the Arts IAP Mentoring Program.

www.lauralappi.com

Laura Lappi Untitled (Study of Charring Wood and Burning Structures II) Site-specific installation, charred wood, smoke. 2018. 39 x 51 x 71 inch. Untitled (Study of Charring Wood and Burning Structures II) a site-specific installation standing in a suburban Colorado landscape at The Yard exhibition space. A large, carbonized wood column is enveloped by smoke emitted from inside the sculpture. Like floating out of a dream, the smoky scene has an eerie feeling

Laura Lappi Untitled (Study of Charring Wood and Burning Structures II) Site-specific installation, charred wood, smoke. 2018. 39 x 51 x 71 inch. Untitled (Study of Charring Wood and Burning Structures II) a site-specific installation standing in a suburban Colorado landscape at The Yard exhibition space. A large, carbonized wood column is enveloped by smoke emitted from inside the sculpture. Like floating out of a dream, the smoky scene has an eerie feeling