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Hannah Hall’s paintings meet the downward gaze of a scavenging dog. They are terrestrial accretions of paper pulp, sand, yarn, and debris. Her process is sculptural and regenerative; the byproducts of one painting often seep into the next. Beneath this cycle of growth, harvest, and decay is the story of the Treader, a groundskeeper of a toxic landscape. The Treader rakes the trash and plants mutant seeds. They revel in stirring the chemical muck that boils on the earth’s surface. It’s a noisy world, captured through found audio samples of tillers, caves, digging, bugs, and gunk, processed and recorded by Annika Johnson. A co-authored manual provides instructions for the being that lives in this post-apocalyptic eden.
Opening at Generator Space on Friday, January 14th, viewings of Treader will be by appointment and limited to small groups of 5 people, or fewer. Please register through Eventbrite or email peter@amplifyarts.org to schedule a time to visit outside of regular gallery appointment hours. Face masks are required.
Exhibition Dates: January 14th - February 18th, 2021
Regular Gallery Hours: Thursdays and Fridays by appointment; 1pm - 5pm
About the Artists:
Hannah Lee Hall lives and works in St. Paul, MN. She received a Bachelor of Fine Arts with a concentration in painting from the Rhode Island School of Art and Design (RISD) in 2010.
Annika Johnson is a musician and Associate Curator of Native American Art at the Joslyn Art Museum where she is developing installations, programming, and research initiatives in collaboration with Indigenous communities. Her research and curatorial projects examine nineteenth-century Native American art and exchange with Euro-Americans, as well as contemporary artistic and activist engagements with the histories and ongoing processes of colonization. Annika received her PhD in art history from the University of Pittsburgh in 2019 and grew up in Minnesota, Dakota homelands called Mni Sota Makoce.