News

“BEST IF USED BY” EXPLORES SIGNIFICANCE OF THE EPHEMERAL

July 27, 2016

BEST IF USED BY
September 2, 2016 – January 15, 2017
In the Artist Hall
Houston Center for Contemporary Craft
4848 Main Street, Houston, TX 77002

Opening Reception & Artist Talk with Celia Butler
Saturday, September 10, 3:00 – 5:00 PM

Reception & Artist Talk with Kazuki Guzmán
Saturday, October 8, 3:00 – 5:00 PM

Hours & Admission
Open Tuesday – Saturday, 10 AM – 5 PM, and Sunday, 12 – 5 PM.
Admission is free.

(HOUSTON, TX) July 27, 2016 — Houston Center for Contemporary Craft (HCCC) is pleased to present BEST IF USED BY, a group exhibition organized by HCCC Curatorial Fellow, Sarah Darro, that investigates the dynamic intersection of craft and food in contemporary culture. Featuring six U.S. and international artists, Celia Butler, Kazuki Guzmán, Joshua Kosker, Aurélie Mathigot, Yuka Otani, and Rachel Shimpock, this show aims to probe the very definitions of craft by staging critical comparisons among works that are moving at varying rates of consumption and deterioration. The works range in material from wool, ceramic, and electroformed metal to cast sugar, cured tangelo peels, and needle-worked bananas.

The fields of craft and artisanal food are simultaneously experiencing revitalization amid a renewed embrace of handmade culture. The term craft is often invoked in culinary and consumer contexts to denote quality and handmade production. The works in BEST IF USED BY investigate the entanglement of these worlds. Viewers are invited to examine the intersecting and diverging qualities of the displayed pieces, all of which possess a complex embodiment of tradition, specialized knowledge, process, culture, and artistry.

Otani and Guzmán both harness the fluidity and instability of organic material in their works, which investigate concepts of earthly delights and consumerism. Tokyo-based Otani is an esteemed glass artist who has incorporated working with melted sugar into her practice. She presents a new installation of cast-sugar Buddha figures that will slowly transcend their forms and melt over the course of the exhibition. Guzmán creates whimsical sculptural works that are activated by everyday materials, which range from embroidered meat to sculpted chewing gum. In BEST IF USED BY, he presents Vuitton Nana, a banana that he needle worked with the logo of the illustrious high-fashion brand.

Shimpock and Mathigot, on the other hand, suspend time. By rendering meals and place settings in traditional craft media, they capture the temporary nature of food and the communal moments garnered by sharing it. Shimpock is a metalsmith who fuses a history of ornamentation and personal adornment with foods that are meant to be consumed quickly and socially. Her electroformed french-fry bangles, gem-encrusted half-eaten donut, and brooches–inspired by what is left on the plate after eating–all make precious and lasting the fleeting, yet universal, act of eating. Mathigot is a Paris-based fiber artist whose crocheted installation works cast moments of everyday life, particularly those conducted in a domestic space, in a new, textile materiality. The artist presents four crocheted meals for this exhibition. Her meatloaf, birthday cake, sandwich, and burger with fries render not only the food items in fiber but also the disposable napkins, cups, and service ware associated with eating those foods.

Both Kosker’s and Butler’s works subvert the material construct of the cultural artifact by transforming and re-contextualizing everyday objects. Kosker is a metalsmith and jeweler whose works incorporate unexpected, found, half-used materials, from shoe soles to used bars of soap. The show will feature his Tangents series, a collection of stark, geometric jewelry forms veneered with Minneola tangelo rinds that he has cured, some even retaining their grocery stickers. His transformation of this organic, disposable material into precious bodily adornment marks the material itself as an artifact deemed worthy of preservation and contemplation. Butler is a mixed-media artist whose works in sugar explore notions of preservation and cultural consumption. For BEST IF USED BY, she presents a site-specific, sugar-encrusted installation that she conceives of as an unearthed artifact. The translucent, pristine candy coats a bucket, held by ropes, and transforms over time, crystallizing, becoming opaque, and, finally, melting.

Consumption is the overarching theme for the inquiries posed by this exhibition. Associated with the food industry, transience, and cultural value, this concept acts as a launching point for discourse about the interconnected nature of food and craft. Exhibiting works that exist on a spectrum of temporality, BEST IF USED BY allows for an exploration of the significance of the ephemeral in a field largely rooted in tangibility.

About Houston Center for Contemporary Craft

Houston Center for Contemporary Craft (HCCC) is a nonprofit visual arts center dedicated to advancing education about the process, product and history of craft. HCCC provides exhibition, retail and studio spaces to support the work of local and national artists and serves as a resource for artists, educators and the community at large.

Located in the Museum District at 4848 Main Street, HCCC is open Tuesday through Saturday, 10 AM – 5 PM, and Sunday, 12 – 5 PM. Summer Hours: Closed Sundays, July 5th – Labor Day. Holidays: Closed Easter, July 4th, Labor Day, Thanksgiving Day, Christmas Day and New Year’s Day. Admission is free. Free parking is available directly behind the facility, off Rosedale and Travis Street. HCCC is three blocks south of Wheeler Ave. MetroRail station on Main Street.

HCCC is funded in part by grants from The Brown Foundation; Houston Endowment, Inc.; the City of Houston through the Houston Arts Alliance; Texas Commission on the Arts; the National Endowment for the Arts; the Kinder Foundation; the Morgan Foundation; Windgate Charitable Foundation; and the Wortham Foundation. HCCC is a member of the Houston Museum District and the Midtown Arts District.

For more information, call 713-529-4848 or visit www.crafthouston.org. Find HCCC on Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram @CraftHouston.

MEDIA CONTACTS

###

More News

September 26, 2024

Last month, artist Shaheen Rahman led two Turkish paper marbling, or ebru, workshops at HCCC, teaching participants how to create one-of-a-kind works of art on

May 31, 2024

Houston Center for Contemporary Craft (HCCC) is pleased to announce the appointment of Zaynab Hilal as the HCCC Curatorial Fellow for the next three years.

May 21, 2024

Georgina Treviño is inspired by metal in all facets of life. By Brittanie Shey Artist Georgina Treviño has made custom jewelry for celebrities including Lady

April 22, 2024

by Doug Welsh THIS SIDE UP, curated by Sarah Darro at the Houston Center for Contemporary Craft, illuminates the often invisible practice of art handling.

April 17, 2024

This summer, Houston Center for Contemporary Craft (HCCC) presents La Fuente del Deseo (The Fountain of Desire), the first, institutional solo exhibition of work by

March 7, 2024

Houston Center for Contemporary Craft (HCCC) is honored to present Disclosure: The Whiteness of Glass, a research-driven exhibition by Related Tactics (Michele Carlson, Weston Teruya,

4848 Main Street, Houston, TX 77002

Houston Center for Contemporary Craft is located in the Houston Museum District, two blocks south of Highway 59, near Rosedale St. Visitors should park in the free parking lot located directly behind the building, off Rosedale and Travis Streets, and enter through the back entrance. 

Free Admission

OPEN TUESDAY – SATURDAY, 10 AM – 5 PM

4848 Main Street, Houston, TX 77002

Houston Center for Contemporary Craft is located in the Houston Museum District, two blocks south of Highway 59, near Rosedale St. Visitors should park in the free parking lot located directly behind the building, off Rosedale and Travis Streets, and enter through the back entrance. 

Free Admission

OPEN TUESDAY – SATURDAY, 10 AM – 5 PM

Skip to content