Laura Kikauka’s body of work over the past thirty years encompasses various mediums including site specific installation, mixed media, electronic sculpture, drawing, photography, video, performance, music, text and costume creations. Kikauka’s installations establish a highly specific visual (and often audio) language that blends the increasingly overlapping worlds of high and low art forms. In general Laura’s ‘excessive aesthetic’ is comparable to urban archeology and addresses issues of consumer culture, and the question of good and bad taste. It also celebrates failure in a humourous and ironic manner.
Kikauka’s work is inspired and derived from decades of on-going collecting of found objects. Employing the formal strategy of meticulously sorting and organizing these objects, as well as modifying or transforming them, she then creates specifically themed and coded installations that transform gallery and exhibition spaces into densely packed, highly detailed installations.
Laura’s categorization speaks of similarities and differences. The Funny Farm studios in rural Meaford and her former ones in Berlin & New York are living and working spaces treated as on-going installations that exemplify, through a density of detail her interest in low class consumer culture. It is with a sense of sarcasm and empathy that she explores this reoccurring theme.
- Jason Schiedel, “Laura Kikauka: Garage-Sale Gold,” Canadian Art, April 12, 2012.
- “Avenue: Questions & Artists,” National Post, September 25, 2009.
- Bill Clarke, “Laura Kikauka,” Border Crossings #112, December 2009.
- Caroline Langill, “Shifting Polarities: Interview with Laura Kikauka,” Fondation Daniel Langlois, 2009.
- Tony Conrad, “A Theory of Emergence,” C Magazine #94, Summer 2007.
- Kathrin Bettina Mueller, “Big feelings in little things,” Culturebase, May 12, 2003.