Kira Dominguez Hultgren’s weavings are a source code of information, memory, and access to knowledge. She uses a unique set of individual structured lines and paths that cross each other, intersecting, knotting, and loosening at varying points that, when tightened and pulled together, reveal either an abstracted set of patterns and shapes or legible text for the viewer to read. Many of her works record a story told through her fingers and body, relaying specific research points or narratives from her background and artistic lineage, including where she learned to weave certain styles, such as from Mary Coronado, a Mapuche-Argentine weaver, or where the artist first encountered weaving and was introduced to the backstrap loom in zocalos in Mexico.
Dominguez Hultgren’s works disrupt, collide, and blend numerous cultures and histories to reveal the complicated reality of existing and living. She views her work as a “scaffolding for stories,” a container for the memories and experiences that she notes “previous generation[s] had to forget, and another generation had to remember; both generations weaving into one another.” Her works are a vessel for cultural memory where she stores and retells the stories of various people, locations, and histories that she engages with or researches. Thinking of her work as a system of data and codes, she manually inserts handspun wool into her matrix to vocalize stories and highlight disruption points regarding topics such as colonialism, race, and ethnic identity. Through the beats of her fingers and hands moving in a rhythmic tempo, she makes distinct choices to disrupt the loom and move counter to fixed singular traditions and definitions of identity or material as an aggressive gesture against the colonial perceptions and structures that attempt to restrict individuals.
Artist texts by Marissa Del Toro
ABOUT THE ARTIST
Kira Dominguez Hultgren (b. 1980) is a U.S.-based artist and educator. She studied French postcolonial theory and literature at Princeton University, and performance and fine arts in Río Negro, Argentina. With a dual-degree MFA/MA in Fine Arts and Visual and Critical Studies from California College of the Arts, her research interests include material and embodied rhetorics, re-storying material culture, and weaving as a performative critique of the visual. Dominguez Hultgren has exhibited her work at the de Young Museum, headlined Untitled, ART San Francisco, was featured in Architectural Digest, and reviewed in the New York Times. She has had two solo shows with Eleanor Harwood Gallery in San Francisco, where she is represented, a solo show at Heroes Gallery in NYC, and her first solo museum show at the San Jose Museum of Quilt and Textile. Her fellowships and residencies include the Headlands Center for the Arts, Facebook, and Gensler Architecture. Dominguez Hultgren is part-time faculty at SAIC in Fiber and Material Studies.
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