Painter Katie Hector joins host Javier Proenza for a conversation on portrait painting, image culture, and the shifting cultural frameworks that shape how faces and bodies are represented in art. Hector reflects on her studio practice, discussing her return to figurative painting and the role of photographic source material in constructing contemporary portraits. The conversation also explores Hector’s concept of a “shadow practice,” including her quilting work made from repurposed painting materials, alongside a broader discussion of portraiture’s historical associations with power, representation, and beauty standards. Together, they consider how contemporary artists engage with the legacy of portrait painting while navigating the visual language of digital and internet-based imagery.
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296 Josh Schaedel — Artist-Run Spaces, Photography Economics & Community in Los Angeles
295 Donel Williams — Abstraction, Black Figuration, Performance Art & Institutional Critique
294 Faris McReynolds — Painting, Art Market Critique, Artist Labor & Institutional Power
293 Jahn Muller: Painting, Generational Memory & the Experience of Art
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