Sculptor Kathleen Ryan meticulously crafts interpretations of everyday objects that prompt meditations on themes of seduction and repulsion, refinement and excess. Profoundly influenced by her West Coast roots, she often focuses on pop-cultural artifacts such as muscle cars and bowling balls alongside biological forms like fruit and flowers. By applying traditional craftsmanship to both natural and industrial materials, Ryan unites the organic and the manufactured, transforming her subjects into tongue-in-cheek allegories for the entropic cycle of life and death.
Ryan was born in Santa Monica, California, in 1984, and lives and works in New Jersey. She graduated with a BA from Pitzer College, Claremont, California, in 2006, and an MFA from the University of California, Los Angeles, in 2014. Her debut museum exhibition, Bacchante, opened at the Theseus Temple, Kunsthistorisches Museum, Vienna, in 2017. For the Bacchante series, she uses concrete casts of balloons chained together in grapelike clusters to explore sensual tension and gravity. Ryan’s subsequent series include Satellite in Repose (2018), in which ceramic birds perch on the remains of a satellite dish, the stalactite-like look of their tails lending the structure a fossilized feel that augments its ambivalent stance toward technological progress and obsolescence. The Generator series (2022–) likewise combines the organic and the human-made; in these works, oyster-like hinged sections of automobile bodies enclose delicate metallic and crystalline spiderwebs.
Botanical forms also define the Bad Fruit (2018–) series, in which pieces of decaying fruit are reimagined in unexpected materials at altered scale. Mining the American craft tradition of pushpin-beaded fruit, Ryan encrusts each carved form’s surface with glass and acrylic beads to delineate “fresh” parts and semiprecious stone beads for “rotten” areas, a conceptual and material disjunction through which she explores ideas of desire and overconsumption. Bad Melon (2020) is a scatter of giant watermelon chunks; the rind of each piece is made of weathered aluminum from a 1973 Airstream Safari camper, a leisure vehicle redolent of postwar optimism. Bad Cherries (2021), another work in the series, features an industrial steel container stuffed with the titular produce, again at inflated size and detailed with lapis lazuli and smoky quartz.