Karen Zalamea, Canada

Residency Period: 1 December 2013 - 1 August 2014 (withdrew as of June 3, 2014)


Bio

Karen Zalamea completed a BFA at Emily Carr University of Art & Design and an MFA at Concordia University. She is the recipient of several awards, including the inaugural Sylvie and Simon Blais Foundation Award for Emerging Visual Artists. Her work has been exhibited and screened across Canada and internationally. She currently lives and works in Vancouver, Canada.
URL: www.karenzalamea.com


On-hiatus Proposal Summary

Adventures in Leisure
Karen's practice has focused heavily on modes of artistic production and on the body as a tool to execute that production. The artwork is a result of the physical performance of effort and skill, with the experience of art making simultaneously inscribed on the working body. For some time she has been contemplating "appropriate" departures from this line of work that would free her from planning future photographic series or performance-based videos centred on completing tasks or repeating actions, a process that often felt like artistic self-flagellation.

While on Residency for Artists on Hiatus, Karen has opted to concentrate solely on leisure through different avenues, without utilizing them as vehicles for neither artistic research nor future projects. This will include her participation in various recreational activities that she is familiar with or as her first attempt. Her list of delving into leisure will certainly develop during the residency.

She feels that being on official hiatus through RFAOH will free her from the anxiety of forecasting her next projects or art-related events, and will allow her the time to redefine her relationship to her ideas, measures of being and doing, ways of delineating experiences, and to her overall artistic identity.


Final Report

Over the past six months when I’d see artist friends and was faced with the expected question of “What are you working on these days?”, I would gladly reply that I was on hiatus. It may have been the combination of blatantly admitting I wasn’t making new work as well as my conviction in my choice of words that piqued their interest. It felt as if I was embracing a taboo, of not submitting to the idea of a constant (and therefore committed) cycle of production and exhibition that seems highly valued and championed in our network. It wasn’t my intention to demonize working on art, yet I was curious about our attitudes towards, and especially projections about, being a working artist.

Being an RFAOH resident made me question a number of things, like why I was a resident to begin with. Could I not be on hiatus outside of this residency? Did my “non-art activities” require some sort of institutional framework to be considered acceptable? Could I not grant this permission to myself? In truth, yes, I could have pursued this on my own, but I did find comfort in being on hiatus with other artists concurrently reflecting on their own hiatuses. And as a framework, RFAOH is a fluid one that for me facilitated a daily questioning of “What am I doing?” that may have been lost had it been self-directed.

I did struggle in the beginning with the thought of publicly seeking out adventures in leisure. I couldn’t shake off a feeling of irresponsibility, as if I was denying the possibilities of my practice over half a year. That of course existed in the mindset of artmaking in the production line of self-definition. If there was anything to shake off, it was that mindset. This residency was not about making nothing, nor being on an art diet based on deprivation, nor was it a display of laziness or creative stagnation, nor was it some hedonistic pursuit. At its core, it led me face-to-face with the fact that I was in fact discovering possibilities in my practice, and that there is much to discover when you let go and enjoy the process. One of my artist friends always stresses the importance of maintaining a “joyful process,” and I’ve always known I wanted a piece of that. I think this time has brought me closer to understanding what that process could be.


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recent comments


From RFAOH co-directors

As in her last post, Karen Zalamea has decided to leave her 8 month on-hiatus residency 2 months early, to resume her art practice with unexpected support she has received. Karen’s case brings another interesting dimension to the notion of hiatus — what if you had an idea for an art project but you could not proceed with it due to the lack of funds; while you are waiting for the support to come or working to earn it, are we on hiatus? And what if you never obtain these funds and therefore the idea never gets realized? 

We thank karen for her participation as our inaugural resident, with her attempt to experience leisure for leisure sake.  RFAOH sincerely wishes her the best of luck for her post on-hiatus life.

Click “Final Report” to read on her experience at RFAOH.

Leave a Comment (0)

 


Final post

After much deliberation, I have decided to withdraw from RFAOH and end my leisure-based hiatus as of May 31st. I was fortunate to receive a grant to produce a new project, and after considering postponing its start date to complete my residency, I’ve decided that now is the right time to resume my art practice. These past six months have been a generative period of reflection on my artistic production and identity, on what constitutes research, on the luxury of time and getting away from it all, and on my general well-being.

My boundless gratitude to the RFAOH directors, Shinobu and Matt, for their tireless efforts in facilitating this experience, and for inviting me to participate along with a group of diverse and thought-provoking residents from around the world.

Leave a Comment (2)

milena kosec wrote on Jun 8:

Oh! Thank you for interesting photos.
Enjoy in new project.

shinobu wrote on Jun 3:

Best of luck from our office, Karen! Milena and we will miss you (: