DK

Image Title: “To the wall” by DK Edition: To the wall #'s 007 - 097, edition 1 of 3 Size: 110" x 120" x 1" Medium: Plywood, primer, photocopies

DK said, “‘This isn't getting laid’ is a multimedia installation of a single brick. Using video, photography, sculpture, and collage this body of work is meant to ask, 'Where do appearance and truthfulness intersect?' I ask that question more in the sense that what we see really depends on our own perspectives. I remember growing up in spaces other people did not want to be. Returning to these memories for me means attempting to reveal the marvelous that is often hidden in the less regarded aspects of life and extending the availability of alternate roles to the subjects, places and objects I am finding.

The results are compositions that are created to help magnify the layers of meanings made possible
by our senses and perceptions. I do this in part because I believe that social constructs are stories that can be taken apart and told differently. In my most recent series, I have been remaking an image of an image as a way to discuss the blinders that can make “someone" into a predetermined “something". I do this as a meditation on disrupting the established ways we are taught to think that about seeing.

Contemplating physical appearance includes thinking of it as an object, or rather how my personhood becomes objectified (or unimaginable). I see my body as a thing that has a name and casts a shadow — I believe that being of color in America involves a process of moving through and adopting from many different cultures. To define what's authentically black or even white, or anywhere in between for that matter is virtually impossible. As there are as many ways of ‘being’ as there are people. I have an understanding of myself as an amalgamation of many things that have been combined into one. An existence that changes based on the context of the space it inhabits.

My work considers how day-to-day existence lends significance to places, objects, and things, elevating them through a process of familiarity. The details that I notice become representations of my reality. They represent both what they are and something else, at the same time. Such symbols, in my opinion, allow for a different way of seeing the self, not as a mirror but as an access point into an alternative definition of individuality. They act as elements that allow the viewer to explore and possibly complicate the narratives that are firmly affixed in normative presumptions.

Within my process, human subjectivities and more individualized identifications are seen as something that can become know-able. My works are metaphors for overcoming “Otherness”— more in the sense that when someone is seen as less than, or as an object, this perspective can then be appropriated and re-loaded with more poignant meanings that point towards agency and autonomy.”

DK's works have been published globally in such magazines as Art21 and Numéro Cinq and exhibited both locally and internationally at such venues as the Brownsville Museum of Fine Art, Photo Center Northwest, Bellevue Arts Museum, Zhou B Art Center, Chicago Industrial Arts & Design Center, Escuela de Belle Arte in Spain, Rogers Park/West Ridge Historical Society Museum, the Seattle Art Museum's Gallery and most recently at Studio la Città in Italy.

DK is a recipient of a Yaddo Residency and Fellowship, Artist Trust’s Grant for Artist Project, the 4Culture Individual Project Award, Joanne Bailey Wilson Endowed Scholarship, and the Vermont Studio Fellowship. DK has served on Seattle Art Museum's Blueprint Roundtable panel and has participated as a guest lecturer at the Henry on the topics of beauty and social inclusion as an intro to their "Out [O] Fashion" Show curated by Deb Willis. He has prepared multimedia presentations for the Society of Photographic Educators, Cornish College of the Arts, and the University of Washington on topics of marginalization and objectification, as well as those related to the history and making of photographs and video.

Commissioned works include private interests as well as commercially based collaborations with designers, art directors and creative directors for such clients as Adobe, ATT, Boeing, Hasbro, IBM, Microsoft, the University of Washington, and the City of Seattle’s Office of Arts and Culture.
On Instagram: @dk_studioimages

Artist Talk with DK
Saturday, March 23rd 1pm pst
In-person at Wa Na Wari