Astrid Reischwitz is a part of our show, Ties That Bind, on show now at the Griffin until April 16th.
Ties that Bind stitches together three unique visions looking at the idea of family and the rewriting of history, myth and personal narratives. These artists work with images and objects, including various materials, with the addition of stitching on found images, personal family photos. Each artist finds ways to change the script, rewrite what has been lost and gain clarity of vision.
Tell us a little about yourself and your background.
Although working in the field of natural science, art always played an important role in my life and I see photography as a way to explore life further and pave a path to the future.
Tell a little about your work in the new exhibition, “Ties That Bind.”
Images in this exhibition are from my series Stories from the Kitchen Table and Spin Club Tapestry, they are based on cultural memories and the evolution of village life in Northern Germany. I see my work as visual storytelling where memories and emotions intertwine into new stories. The work is also a reflection on belonging. I have lived for many years abroad and the photographic work is important to create a new home, a new shelter of emotions.
What led to your decision to implement family keepsakes into your work as a means of exploring themes like memory and place?
Keepsakes like old photos and embroidered fabric can tell us more about the past, about the people who touched these memorabilia. Traditional stories have a profound impact on my current photographic work. In my village in Germany, women met regularly in “Spin Clubs” to spin wool, embroider, and stitch fabrics for their homes. My composite images are based on these stories and cultural characteristics and I transform this tradition of storytelling into a visual journey. With my own embroidered elements, I explore the theme of memory further.
What led to your decision to implement family keepsakes into your work as a means of exploring themes like memory and place?
Keepsakes like old photos and embroidered fabric can tell us more about the past, about the people who touched these memorabilia. Traditional stories have a profound impact on my current photographic work. In my village in Germany, women met regularly in “Spin Clubs” to spin wool, embroider, and stitch fabrics for their homes. My composite images are based on these stories and cultural characteristics and I transform this tradition of storytelling into a visual journey. With my own embroidered elements, I explore the theme of memory further.
Finally, what is a literary, musical or visual obsession you have at the moment?
I love street art/graffiti and became interested in the connection between street art and early rap music after visiting the exhibition “Basquiat and the Hip-Hop Generation” at the Museum of Fine Arts Boston. Absolutely obsessed with Rapture by Blondie.
ABOUT ASTRID REISCHWITZ
Astrid Reischwitz is a lens-based artist whose work explores storytelling from a personal perspective. Using keepsakes from family life, old photographs, and storytelling strategies, she builds a visual world of memory, identity, place, and home. Her current focus is the exploration of personal and collective memory influenced by her upbringing in Germany.
Reischwitz has exhibited at national and international museums and galleries including Newport Art Museum, Griffin Museum of Photography, Danforth Art Museum, Photographic Resource Center, The Center for Fine Art Photography (CO), Rhode Island Center for Photographic Arts, Center for Photographic Art (CA), FotoNostrum, Dina Mitrani Gallery and Gallery Kayafas.
She has received multiple awards, including the 2020 Griffin Award at the Griffin Museum of Photography and the Multimedia Award at the 2020 San Francisco Bay International Photo Awards. Her series “Spin Club Tapestry” was selected as a Juror’s Pick at the 2021 LensCulture Art Photography Awards and is the Series Winner at the 2021 Siena International Photo Awards. She was a Photolucida Critical Mass Top 50 photographer in 2021, 2020, 2019, and 2016; and is a Mass Cultural Council 2021 Artist Fellowship Finalist in Photography.
Her work was featured in Fraction Magazine, Lenscratch, LensCulture, What Will You Rembember?, Wired Japan, Il Post Italy, P3 Portugal, Aint-Bad Magazine, The Boston Globe, NRC Handelsblad Amsterdam, as well as other media outlets.