Beata Wehr

beatawehr@gmail.com

www.beatawehr.com



Beata Wehr was born in Warsaw, Poland, and came to the United States in 1985. She graduated from the Warsaw University in Poland with an M.A. degree in art history and from the University of Arizona with M.F.A. in painting. She creates one-of-a-kind mixed media books, prints limited editions of books, and paints, examining in her work the ideas of home, place, time, transience and multi-cultural experiences. Her works were shown at many individual and group exhibitions in North America, Europe, Africa and Australia and are included in over 30 public collections - among others in the Walker Art Museum, Fogg Museum at Harvard, Cleveland Art Institute, Center for Creative Photography, University of Arizona, Tucson, Yale University, Duke University, Rochester Institute of Technology, and in Spain, Poland, Lithuania, Hungary, France and Egypt. In 2002 her book "Taming metal objects" was awarded an honorable mention at the Northwest Bookfest in Seattle, Washington. Beata is also an educator teaching classes at the University of Arizona, Pima Community College, Tucson Museum of Art and giving workshops to adults and children.

Artist Statement

Most of my work relates to my experience as a European living in the U.S. I came here 23 years ago from Warsaw. Since my connection to Poland is very strong, culturally I am in between the two worlds. This is probably a quite common experience of many immigrants, so I think that although I am talking about myself, it is more universal. In my work I address the problems with complete understanding on both verbal and non-verbal levels, adaptation, nostalgia, isolation, dislocation and identity. I moved many times, I had 12 homes -- so I started to define again the idea and meaning of home. I had to tame the new space in order to make Tucson, which is so different than Warsaw, my new home.

I found artists' books to be especially useful in talking about the issues of identity, immigration, and dislocation. I like their intimate format, and the fact that many media could be combined on the pages, creating layers of images. My books are usually bilingual, or semi-bilingual and I often mix images with writing, pieces of newspapers, found objects and other elements reflecting the everyday life in Tucson as well as my links to Poland. I try to combine two different experiences from two different worlds in this “in between” situation. I do not know if it is ever possible, as my native life, language, landscape, culture are so different then my life here in Tucson. I want my viewers who will not understand part of the text to experience the difficulties with comprehension. I hope that those who are not from this culture can relate to the problem, and those who are from here will be more aware of it -- especially that It also relates to migration and feeling of dislocation which is an experience many Americans encounter.

I am also interested in recording the passage of time, obsessed by the changes happening in our life, changes of our fragile bodies, our minds. I am curious how the past determines the present and how what is happening now influences our thinking about the past. The rhythm of life is different depending on the place we live, our age, occupation, gender, and role in a family and in a society. I am trying to capture chunks of time comparing different periods of my life, recording transience by creating journal-like books, time lines, letters from the past, calendars. In my work the past is mixed with the present, experiences from Poland with those from here. Some of the materials I am working with are found, so their history is unknown to me, and this mystery creates yet another layer of thinking about the time with all what is unknown and can only be guessed. Time and transience are very important factors in our life, and this why I am choosing them as a subject.

I feel that experiencing influences of the two different cultures -- Polish and American -- shapes my identity and perception of life, and this is what I want to communicate to a viewer.

Please visit her website: http://www.artmajeur.com/beatawehr