past exhibition
Hand Me Down
a national exhibition juried by LaiSun Keane
Hand Me Down is a national exhibition juried by LaiSun Keane, owner of LaiSun Keane Gallery. In Hand Me Down, the exhibiting artists present work that documents and enlists inherited or cultural materials and objects.
For a painting reference, Roz Sommer uses an image of a relative from an old family photo taken in Poland, now Lithuania, in 1929. The person depicted in Sommer’s Forefather was among many relatives pictured in the original family photograph who were tragically killed in the Holocaust. Nilou Moochhala embraces the dual existence that arises from displacement and dislocation from one’s sense of home; in Chhodna (Leave), she reflects on the journeys and paths taken—in real or imagined realms—by various family members. The family quilt kept us warm and towed us home by Ryan Richey employs straightforward compositional strategies, relatable perspectives, and humor to build common ground among viewers and explore vulnerability, shared experiences, and life in America.
Utilizing collage, mixed media, tapestry, printmaking, ceramics, embroidery, painting, cyanotype, found objects, and more, the artists with work on view in Hand Me Down use or reference heirlooms and objects that have witnessed and encountered personal histories. The reclamation of inherited materials and objects—such as a doily crocheted by a great-grandmother, inherited wallpaper, and a family photograph—are tinged with nostalgia or recollection and reveal personal and universal perspectives.
Featured Artists
Fern Apfel, Sienna Bucu, Jeanne Ciravolo, Monique Crabb, Dean Ebben, Anna Bella Guggenheimer, Kate Knox, Fruma Markowitz, Mary Mazziotti, Nilou Moochhala, Dustin Nguyễn, Geraldine Ondrizek, Danielle Pratt, Brooke Raven, Amy Rice, Ryan Richey, Kelly Simons, Roz Sommer, Danyang Song, Ezra Thompson, Mara Wagner, Antoinette Winters, Yikun Xu
About the Juror
LaiSun Keane has been involved in the Boston art scene since 2015, at first volunteering and working from junior level for non-profits and galleries. She then became a co-owner of a gallery for two years before starting her own in April 2020. Her eponymous gallery, located in South End’s Sowa Art District, focuses on showcasing non-mainstream voices and are thematic and narrative based. Besides in-person and online exhibitions, her gallery has participated in Art Fairs in New York, Los Angeles, and Miami.