Details
First Name | Anika |
Last Name | Kowalik |
Username | anikak |
Bio | Anika Kowalik is a Multidisciplinary artist residing in Milwaukee, WI. They completed a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Printmaking at the Milwaukee Institute of Art and Design in 2017. Their current practice channels personal experiences as a young black femme, exploring the depths of institutionalization, ancestry, and the redefining of place to gain autonomy over their historical narrative. Kowalik believes in grounding truths through many facets of documentation to preserve differing narratives outside those we are taught traditionally. They find it easier to communicate these personal experiences through materiality, expanding beyond the physical body. Some recent accomplishments include Arts Leader for the National Leaders of Color Fellowship 2022-2023 cohort as the Representative for the state of Wisconsin; Grant recipient of the Gener8tor x Sherman Phoenix 12-week Art Accelerator Program in April 2023 (Milwaukee, WI); A two-time recipient of the Artistic Excellence Award and spotlight feature in the Circle Foundation for the Contemporary Arts publication in 2023 (Europe). Kowalik’s work has been shown at the Museum of Wisconsin Art in 2023 (West Bend, WI); the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art for the Wisconsin Triennial in 2022 (Madison, WI); the Freeport Art Museum in 2022 (Freeport, IL); ARC Gallery in 2022 (Chicago, IL); the John Michael Kohler Arts Center during their residency in 2021 (Sheboygan, WI). |
Website | |
Country of residence | United States (US) |
Statement
Statement | Kowalik’s recent work is an ongoing exploration for finding placement within the existing historical timeline. Rerouting, tracing, and sorting misplaced [often misleading] information brings an opportunity to ground themselves in their narrative. They pay homage to ancestry, mysticism and marronage as frames of reference within this body of work. These frames are vehicles used to affirm and contextualize their current circumstances- living in a black body.
This repetitive process of resorting and embedding themselves in a more inclusionary narrative allows them to relish in transformative experiences within their personal growth and healing of generational wounding. In this particular body of work, Kowalik is the traveler and discovers themselves through an arduous hellscape that is working against them. The unforgiving terrain takes on anthropomorphic traits indicative of systemic issues that have haunted them and their ancestors. Their vulnerable and unapologetic nature takes center stage, as they ground themselves by reconciling their current and pre-existing narratives.
Remnants of the journey can be identified in the soft sculptures which are containers that capture the body’s movements while navigating the hellscape. Acknowledgment of shedding one’s past is recalled through an accumulation of discarded kanekalon hair. The repetitive imagery of loud dogs signals the relentless progression and natural instinct when provoked in this undertaking of self-mastery.
Kowalik recognizes everything truly comes to a close when they reconcile with history. Their reconciliation process is captured through labor, material and writing. With a focus on growth and healing of generational wounds, Kowalik finds place and meaning in the existing Black historical timeline and foresees a prosperous future ahead. |
Interests and medias
Interests | Collage, Drawing, Mixed media, Sculpture, Textile art |
Drawing medias | Acrylic, Charcoal, Graphite, Ink, Sketch, Watercolor, Glitter |
Textile medias | cotton, weaving |
Collage medias | Digital collage / eCollage, Three-dimensional collage |
Sculpture medias | Textile |