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Jean Lowe
American painter and sculptor From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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Jean Lowe is a California-based painter and sculptor. She creates installations and sculptural works of enamel-painted papier-mâché.
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Education and career
Lowe earned a B.A. from UC Berkeley in 1983. She earned her MFA from UC San Diego in 1988.
She was a lecturer at UC San Diego from 1992 to 2008.[1]
Works
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Installations
Lowe's installations are handmade, labor-intensive and visually playful installations with papier-mâché furnishings and objects juxtaposed to site specific wall painting. Lowe says of her installations, "Intellectually I am driven by an interest in challenging a status quo anthropocentric world view and formally interested in marrying that content to a 'domestic' decorative esthetic."
Many of Lowe's installations have quoted 18th and 19th century French decoration, rife with romanticized images of animals and nature and imbued with a sense of class and privilege. Into this fabric she substitutes or integrate corresponding contemporary attitudes—both about our treatment of the land and its other inhabitants and our attitudes regarding decoration: the wrestling match between high and low art.

Jean Lowe, Accomplishments of Man, The California Center for the Arts, Escondido, CA, 1995.

Jean Lowe, Carpet Showroom | Quint Gallery, 2019
Books
Lowe creates sculptural representations of everyday objects using papier-mâché and enamel paint. She is known for her papier-mâché books and has created a large collection of them with evocative and amusing titles. Her work Books and Ideas in an Age of Anxiety comprises a collection of them in display cases and is situated in Byers Hall at UCSF as part of the J. Michael Bishop Art Collection at Mission Bay.[2]
Among the book titles are:
- Accelerated Zen Buddhism: How to Win at the Hereafter
- Achieve and Maintain a More Powerful Delusion
- Anxiety: The Unexploited Weight Loss Tool
- Artistic Mammography
- Back to Nature: The Notes of Marie Antoinette
- Biblical Family Values
- Cachet: What It Is & How to Get It
- Close But Not Close Enough: The Case for Primate Experimentation
- Craft Your Way to Mental Health
- The Death of Painting
- The Eco-Tourist's Guide to Las Vegas
- Foreclosure Etiquette
- Freedom from Rigor & Competence
- Great Biceps: In 20 to Life
- Great Golf Courses of the World
- A Guide to Box Wines
- Help Me Make Up My Mind, Lord
- The High Fiber Diet
- A History of Genital Warts
- Hormones and Behavior
- Hot Buttered Cop Porn
- How to Dominate Women
- If God Loves Me, Why Am I Living in My Van?
- If God Loves Me, Why Do I Need a Vibrator?
- The Jesus Workout
- Jet-Skiing Mother Ganges
- The Joy of Pickling
- Just Ask God: Washboard Abs for Life
- Kindle: The Missing Manual
- Leadership and You
- Liposuction of the Jowls
- Militant Feminist Veganism for All
- Narcissism and You
- Nutritainment
- Perfect Poultry: Best Recipes from the Audubon Silver Circle Club
- Premature Articulation
- A Quotidian Guide to the Basics
- Rekindling your Passion for What Might Have Been
- Rethinking the Koran
- Something Awesome Is Coming Your Way
- String Theory
- Torture Preparedness
- Tough Love and your Elderly Parents
- The Triumph of Minimalism
- Yosemite: Observations from Behind the Wheel
- The Way Things Work: Build Your Own Guillotine
- What Would Satan Eat?
- When to Tell Your Husband He's Adopted
- Who's Who in American Pre-Schools
- Who's Who in American Prisons
- Who's Who in the Multiverse
- Yes, Yes, Yes!
- Yoga and Stress Reduction
- Your Soul: Fixer Upper or Teardown?
Exhibitions
Lowe has exhibited in both New York and Los Angeles. She participated in the 1994 exhibition Bad Girls West.[3] In 1995 she collaborated on the installation Bull Story with artist Kim MacConnel.[4]
Lowe's 2012 exhibition Hey Sexy! blended foregrounds depicting imagery from consumer culture with baroque decor backgrounds of the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries.[5][6] The exhibition incorporated sculptural objects such as tissue boxes, cases of beer, and a store where sculptural recreations of commodities are sold.[7]
Lowe's work frequently employs satire. In a review of her 2014 exhibition at Rosamund Felsen Gallery, Leah Ollman of the Los Angeles Times wrote that she "stabs satirically at broad-scale practices of deception, as well as personal patterns of self-deception."[8]
Lowe's works are included in the collections of the San Diego Museum of Art, The New Children's Museum, and the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego.[1]
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Awards and honors
Lowe has twice received fellowships from the Western States Arts Federation/NEA and has received a grant from the Pollock-Krasner Foundation. She was also awarded the CalArts Alpert/Ucross Residency Prize.[1] She won the Alberta duPont Bonsal Foundation Art Prize in 2000. She was also the recipient of the 2006/2007 San Diego Art Prize.[9]
Personal life
Lowe lives in Encinitas and is married to artist Kim MacConnel.[10]
References
External links
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