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Deb Sokolow (born 1974) is an American visual artist who lives and works in Chicago. Sokolow’s work uses both image and text to conjure connections among historical events, celebrities, politicians, and her own personal history in order to spur new consideration of alternate possible realities. Her work has been exhibited widely and is part of a number of permanent collections, including the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Chicago's Museum of Contemporary Art, the Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Spertus Museum.


Biography

Deb Sokolow was born in 1974. She moved from Davis, CA to attend the University of Illinois at Urbana / Champaign, where she earned a BFA in 1996. She attended the school of the Art Institute, receiving her MFA in 2004. She is associate professor of instruction, art theory and practice at Northwestern University in Evanston, IL, where she has worked since 2007.


Artwork

Sokolow has described her work as “Text-driven narrative drawings”. She has shown works large enough to take up the gallery wall, as well as smaller drawings on notebook-size paper, as well as editions of hand-made and limited-run books. Her work includes drawings resembling floor plans, architectural renderings, as well as portraiture. Sokolow creates semi-fictitious narratives with drawing, collage and text which incorporate elements of history, politics, humor and the nefarious. Her large-scale installations, works on paper and panel, and artist books feature a nameless, paranoid narrator who uncovers sinister plots. Each piece includes writing which often present real people or real world scenarios, adding comical, fictional elements in order to invite the viewer to re-examine their own beliefs on a topic. Her work has covered many topics, including prominent or powerful men such as illusionist David Copperfield, drug lord Amado Carrillo Fuentes, Vladimir Putin, Frank Lloyd Wright, artist Willem De Kooning, and cult leader Jim Jones. She has used personal history as the starting point of compositions, as in the 2010 artist book, “Briefcase Exchange, Men’s Bathroom, McDonalds, Washington, D.C., 1986.” Sokolow populated a large 2010 piece called, “You tell people you're working really hard on things these days” with an imagined set of characters based on the real-life occupants of Sokolow’s studio as well as the sculptor Richard Serra. Richard Serra had also appeared in a 2009 piece entitled, “Dear Trusted Associate,” in which Sokolow portrays a paranoid alternate reality in which the noted sculptor engages in criminal activity. She often works with three distinct voices, which all interact and disagree with each other. In 2003, during graduate school at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, she had what she describes as an “art crisis,” when she “realized I didn’t know what the heck I was doing or wanted to do as an artist. I had no personal investment in anything going on in the studio, so I stopped making work.” She returned home, and spent time watching movies, notably Rocky (1976). In order to have work ready for an upcoming show, she created the piece “Rocky and Adrian (and Me).” The piece uses the tropes of a flowchart to analyze the love story between Stallone’s character, the small-time thug and boxer Rocky Balboa, and Adrian Pennino, a shy pet shop clerk portrayed by Talia Shire. In addition to charting the relationship depicted in the film, Sokolow inserted references to herself in relation to Rocky. In a discussion about this piece, an art history professor commented that looking at her work was “like doing homework.” She has been expanding on this mode of making art ever since. ''Someone Tell Mayor Daley, the Pirates are Coming'' is a single sheet of blue paper which maps out the narrator's suspicions that pirates have infiltrated your Chicago office. The narration is second person, and you suspect something is wrong when all of your co-workers are wearing bandannas and chunky gold earrings. As you delve further into the plot, you realize that the pirates are after Mayor
Richard M. Daley Richard Michael Daley (born April 24, 1942) is an American politician who served as the 54th mayor of Chicago, Illinois, from 1989 to 2011. Daley was elected mayor in 1989 and was reelected five times until declining to run for a seventh term ...
's treasure buried at the former site of
Meigs Field Merrill C. Meigs Field Airport (pronounced , formerly ) was a single-runway airport in Chicago that was in operation from December 1948 until March 2003 on Northerly Island, an artificial peninsula on Lake Michigan. The airport sat adjacent to ...
. Her work has been written about i
The New York TimesArt in Print
and she is included i
VITAMIN D2
a hardcover survey of contemporary drawing practices published by Phaidon. Podcast interviews include Tyler Green's Modern Art Notes Podcast and
Bad at Sports Bad or BAD may refer to: Common meanings *Evil, the opposite of moral good *Error, Erroneous, inaccurate or incorrect *Unhealthy, or counter to well-being *Antagonist, the threat or obstacle of moral good Acronyms * BAD-2, a Soviet armored tr ...
. She is a 2010 resident of the
Art Omi Art Omi, formerly Omi International Arts Center, is a non-profit international arts organization located in Columbia County, New York, Columbia County in Ghent, New York. The organization provides Artist-in-residence, residencies for writers, art ...
International Artists Residency and
2012 recipient
of an Artadia Chicago grant.


Awards


2012

Artadia Award (Chicago): The Fund for Art and Dialogue Residency, Nordisk Kunstnarsenter Dalsåsen, Norwegian Ministry Of Culture, Norway


2010

International Artists Residency, Art Omi, Ghent, NY


2009

Works-in-Progress Residency, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, IL


2005

Visual Arts Fellowship, Illinois Arts Council


Exhibitions


2020

Loose History, Fine Art Gallery, University of Wisconsin-Parkside, Kenosha, WI (solo)


2019

Profiles in Leadership // Drawings without words, Western Exhibitions, Chicago, IL (solo) 2017 Deb Sokolow’s archive of possibilities, curated by Kristin Korolowicz, The Stolbun Collection, Chicago, IL (solo) Conspiracies, Minimalism, and the Philly Cheesesteak Sandwich: An Artist Book Retrospective from Deb (solo) Sokolow. The Reading Room, Dallas, TX The Presidents (some of them). Reilly Gallery, Providence College Galleries, RI (solo) Deb Sokolow: Schematics, Surveillance, Murder, University Galleries, Illinois State University, Normal, IL (solo)


2016

Men, Western Exhibitions, Chicago, IL (solo) Debate Stage Water Bottles, G Fine Arts, Washington, DC (solo) Deb Sokolow for Syntax Season, PrintText, Indianapolis, IN (solo)


2015

Mr. F, Ski Club, Milwaukee, WI (solo)


2014

All Your Vulnerabilities Will Be Assessed, The University Galleries, Texas State University, San Marcos, TX (solo)


2013

Some concerns about the candidate / MATRIX 166, Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, CT (solo) Western Exhibitions, Chicago, IL (solo)


2012

All Your Vulnerabilities Will Be Assessed, Moore College of Art, Philadelphia, PA (solo)


2011

Notes on Denver International Airport and the New World Order, Abrons Art Center, New York, NY (solo)
Drawings & Stories, Lawrence University, Appleton, WI (solo)


2010

Western Exhibitions, Chicago, IL (solo)


2009

Ground Level Projects: Deb Sokolow, Spertus Museum, Chicago, IL (solo)


2008

You are one step closer to learning the truth, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, MO (solo) The trouble with people you don’t know, Inova nstitute of Visual Arts Milwaukee, WI (solo)


2006

Secrets and Lies and More Lies, 40000, Chicago, IL (solo)


2005

Someone tell Mayor Daley, the pirates are coming, Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (solo)


References


External links


Personal websiteChicago Magazine profile
(March 4, 2009) {{DEFAULTSORT:Sokolow, Deb Living people American contemporary artists Information graphic designers School of the Art Institute of Chicago alumni University of Illinois College of Fine and Applied Arts alumni 1974 births