Lauren Fensterstock


Lauren Fensterstock is an American artist, writer, curator, critic, and educator living and working in Portland, Maine. Fensterstock’s work has been widely shown nationally at venues such as the John Michael Kohler Art Center, the Bowdoin College Museum of Art,
the Portland Museum of Art, and is held in public and private collections throughout the U.S, Europe, and Asia.

Education

Fensterstock received her Bachelor of Fine Arts from Parsons School of Design in New York, New York in 1997 where she studied with Lisa Gralnick.
She went on to receive her Master of Fine Arts from SUNY-New Paltz in New Paltz, New York in 2000 where she studied with Myra Mimlitsch-Gray and Jamie Bennett.

Professional experience

Fensterstock currently works as a critic at the Rhode Island School of Design in the graduate Jewelry + Metalsmithing department. Fensterstock has held previous teaching appointments at the Maine College of Art, New Hampshire Institute of Art, Vermont College, SUNY New Paltz, and as a visiting critic for several institutions. Fensterstock served as professorial chair at the Lamar Dodd School of Art during the 2017-2018 academic year. Along with teaching, Fensterstock also worked in an administrative capacity, and served as the Academic Director of the MFA program at the Maine College of Art from 2010-2012.
Fensterstock has worked as a curator throughout her career. Most notably she served as the interim director at the Institute of Contemporary Art at the Maine College of Art, the director of Hay Gallery, as the Exhibitions Developer for the Saco Museum, and as a guest curator for several exhibitions nationwide.
Fensterstock has written for a variety of publications including Metalsmith Magazine, ‘’Maine Magazine’’, Art New England, Maine Arts Magazine, and numerous catalog essays. In addition to writing, Fensterstock has severed as the Maine State Editor for Art New England from 2005-2007, and the Associate Editor for Arts Guide Portland from 2005-2007.

Selected series and artwork

Precious Heirlooms 2004-2010

Fensterstock’s training in Metalsmithing + Jewelry dominated her early work that centered on conversations about adornment, beauty, preciousness, and ephemerality. In her series Precarious Heirlooms, Fensterstock utilized such materials as potatoes, bananas, and soap, setting precious stones and pearls in the materials. The temporary nature of these base materials changed the pieces over time; the soap dried and cracked, the potatoes shriveled and grew tendril like sprouts, and the banana rotted turning black and deflated. Fensterstock documented these changes, referring to them as What Happens.

Third Nature 2007-2014

Fensterstock’s long running series, Third Nature utilized the process of quilling which she combined with material such as Plexiglas and charcoal to create enclosed stand-alone sculptures. After purchasing her first home, Fensterstock was struck by how specific her ideas on how her garden “should” be. This lead Fensterstock to research historic landscape design and theory, how people have interacted with the land through such implements as the Claude Glass, and how people actively shape the land around them. The result of this research is Fensterstock’s series Third Nature that is marked by its “monochromatic iterations of nature and gardens” that are enclosed and contained in various boxes, vitrines, and wall panels.

Installations 2008-2014

Fensterstock built upon the research and themes of Third Nature in a series of site-specific installation projects. Fensterstock installed and showed these projects in such venues as the Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Walker Contemporary, the Ogunquit Museum of American Art, and the John Michael Kohler Arts Center. Fensterstock’s shift in scale pull in additional influences and conversations such as the influences of minimalist artist Donald Judd and land artist Robert Smithson.

Grottos 2014-present

Fensterstock's newest body of work has moved away from the quilled floral designs that marked her long running Third Nature and installation work, and towards "cavernous pieces that imitate stalagmites and stalactites." Fensterstock explains the impetus for the shift in work for Interview Magazine:
For the last few years, I've been doing a lot of work with paper and looking at the history of garden designs, the ways different styles represent different ideas about man's role in the world. The differences between a Baroque garden and a picturesque garden represent two completely different world views. I kept coming across garden grotto, which are artificial caves, and I became obsessed with them because it's this blend of culture and nature. It's in a natural space, but it's really an augmented natural space. Sometimes they would take, in the 18th century, a cave and reform it, cover the entire surface with shells or another kind of ornament, and create a space that really merged nature and culture.
With this new body of work also came new materials; shells coated and dripping in black rubber replaced the daintily curling paper to create ominous stalagmites and stalactites. The first piece of this series Stalagmite debuted at Pulse Miami in 2015.

Selected exhibitions

Solo exhibitions