Early on in her career, Garcia worked on international projects with Emi Fontana and Rirkrit Tiravanija, such as Women in the City (2008), Palm Pavilion (2008) and Asile Flottant (2010). These offerings take place within immersive sculptures that the artist considers temples. Her interactive works explore themes such as healing, mindfulness, participation, interconnectedness, and the experiential in art and are meant as offerings to the public. Garcia’s bodies - her body, or the constructed bodies seen in her drawings, are created as vehicles for spiritual experience where a female body becomes a sacred site. Provocative and oftentimes interactive, her work engages with the Goddess Archetype as a means of reclaiming identity vis a vis the female body. Inspired by her spiritual practice and travels to ancient and sacred sites, Garcia works in a variety of media, including site-specific performance, video, sculpture, and drawing. 1978, Los Angeles, CA) lives and works between Los Angeles and the Mediterranean. The exhibition is a journey into feminine consciousness. Symbols that activate potent sexual, and numinous powers. Symbols intertwined with humanity’s earliest beginnings, symbols of creation, destruction, birth, death, rebirth and inner experience. The Feminine Divine is an invitation into a world of symbols. Emanating from the video are the sounds of healing bowls, an offering which intentionally invokes a kind of meditative, spiritual experience. By channeling feminine wisdom and spirituality, Garcia’s body serves as a bridge between terrestrial elements of the earthen ground and the cosmic qualities embodied in the beams of light reflected from the Sun. In the video Garcia plays with the reflective quality of geometric, mirrored sculptures similar to the sculptures placed within the installation. The artist uses her body as a vessel for a ritualistic performance borrowing from ancient Goddess iconography. The exhibition also features a hypnotic video filmed on the island of Ibiza, Spain. Together the objects and drawings create a temple complex or sacred site. The pyramid amplifies the energy of the drawings. Drawings and geometric sculptures surround the pyramid and act as protective guardians. In the middle of the exhibition is a minimally structured pyramid made of six stainless steel rods where the base of the pyramid touches the earth, while the top points to the sky. A culture at the very dawn of humanity, when “God was a woman, do you remember?” Cultures where the Womxn is worshipped as a powerful creatrix/destructress, and where time is a cycle of birth, death and rebirth. Spiritual cultures led by Womxn priestesses, where non-binary persons hold significant and magical roles. Egalitarian, ecological and peaceful cultures that acknowledge and honor our interdependence with the Earth, the Cosmos and all of life. In a time where we are seeing patriarchy fail destructively it is important to know that there have been viable and sustainable alternatives to a culture of domination. In this exhibition the artist shares a representation of the female form that challenges the historical narrative and instead enacts the numinous power of female sexuality. In Garcia’s drawings the female genitals are displayed as geometric cosmologies similar to mandalas, yantras or sacred sites seen from above, and operate as meditative tools, devotional objects, and portals to inner experience. In ancient matrifocal cultures, we find the earliest form of abstraction where female genitalia are represented by The Sacred V- a motif found in Garcia’s work. These sacred figures embody and enact an empowered, magical female sexuality, emblematic of fertility. The Feminine Divine is an exhibition inspired by early Neolithic Goddess idols, where the female figure is often seen displaying Her large, magical vulva. The functions of fertility and apotropaia, which count among the functions of the early historic display and dancing figures, grow out of this numinosity and reflect the belief in and honoring of the powers of the ancient divine feminine.” - Miriam Robbins Dexter, Sacred Display: Divine and Magical Female Figures of Eurasia. “The "sexual" display of these female figures reflects the huge numinosity of the prehistoric divine feminine, and of her magical genitalia. This is the artist’s first solo show with the gallery. GAVLAK Los Angeles is pleased to present: The Feminine Divine, a solo exhibition of drawings, sculptures and video by multi-media artist Kathryn Garcia.
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