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Caroline Mak was born in England and
raised in Hong Kong. She received her bachelor’s degree
in biology from Stanford University and recent M.F.A
graduate from the University of Chicago. Caroline moved
to Brooklyn after graduation and set up a studio in
Gowanus, Brooklyn where she primarily works in sculpture
and installations, using materials that range from
fabrics to industrial insulation foam.
Her background in biology is integral in
her approach to her work. The influence of biology is
evident in the organic and zoomorphic forms she creates
in her installations and sculptures. That is not to say
she makes art commenting on science or about science,
but is very much aware of the impact biological systems
have on our everyday existence and she tries to
acknowledge this world, whether in forms that resemble
amoeba or a model of a spreading disease that is
referenced.
She is interested in pushing her work in
the direction of becoming self-contained worlds,
complete with their own emergent sets of patterns and
inherent logic; she considers each installation an
autonomous system that is capable of producing its own
organization, drawing from the concept of autopoiesis a
term originally coined by biologists Humberto Maturana
and Francisco Varela to describe biological systems like
a cell.
Materiality is a vital part of her work,
heavily influenced by trawling fabric stores and second
hand stores; cheap strands of fake pearls and old
doilies appear in altered forms and transformed
contexts. Living much of her adult like in foreign
cities has been a large influence---- she has witnessed
the variety of materials that are used in different
cultures for similar purposes.
http://www.carolinemak.com/
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