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Kirsha Kaechele (born 1976) is an American contemporary art curator, artist, and practitioner of sustainable building design. She is founder of KKProjects, Life is Art Foundation.


Early life

Kaechele was born in Topanga Canyon, California, and raised in Guam, Micronesia and
Japan Japan ( ja, 日本, or , and formally , ''Nihonkoku'') is an island country in East Asia. It is situated in the northwest Pacific Ocean, and is bordered on the west by the Sea of Japan, while extending from the Sea of Okhotsk in the north ...
. Her father was a retired
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aerospace engineer and early practitioner of Rolfing.


Career

In 1994, Kaechele began an informal education with travel over land to more than fifty countries in seven years, a hands-on investigation of the idea that life designs itself. During this period, she met and mentored with a variety of thinkers, including
Biosphere 2 Biosphere 2 is an American Earth system science research facility located in Oracle, Arizona. Its mission is to serve as a center for research, outreach, teaching, and lifelong learning about Earth, its living systems, and its place in the univers ...
creator
John P. Allen John Polk Allen (born May 6, 1929, Carnegie, Oklahoma) is a systems ecologist, engineer, metallurgist, adventurer, and writer. Allen is a proponent of the science of biospherics and a pioneer in sustainable co-evolutionary development. He is the ...
, chemist Albert Hoffman, writers Tom Robbins and
John C. Lilly John Cunningham Lilly (January 6, 1915 – September 30, 2001)John C. Lilly
at
, John Perry Barlow, Rodleen Getsic, psychiatrist Oscar Janiger, artist
Peter Nadin Peter Nadin (born 1954) is a British-born American artist, poet, and farmer. Early career Nadin was born in Bromborough, in northwest England He studied fine art at Newcastle upon Tyne University from 1972–76, before moving to New York. Fr ...
and German architects building sustainably on a Sannyasin commune in Maui, Hawaii. In 1995, she worked with the Shipibo ayahuasca shamans in the Peruvian Amazon. In 1996, she performed with La Mama theater in New York City. On and off Kaechele attended University of California, Santa Cruz, but in 1999, left just short of graduation to work with
VH1 VH1 (originally an initialism of Video Hits One) is an American basic cable television network based in New York City and owned by Paramount Global. It was created by Warner-Amex Satellite Entertainment, at the time a division of Warner Commun ...
producer Tad Low on a travel show. The production took her to remote southern Lebanon, where she remained with a group of writers, philosophers and historians in Sur ( Tyre), a nonpartisan observer in
Hezbollah Hezbollah (; ar, حزب الله ', , also transliterated Hizbullah or Hizballah, among others) is a Lebanese Shia Islamist political party and militant group, led by its Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah since 1992. Hezbollah's parami ...
territory. In 2000 Kaechele moved to New Orleans and joined the downtown art scene, collaborating with artist Matt Vis (Kid Calculator) of
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on performance art projects and backup dancing for musicians
Quintron Quintron (real name Robert Rolston; born c. 1967 in Germany) is an American musician and leader of the eponymous one-man-band, "Quintron". He is a nightclub organist and inventor, who has patented a number of his own inventions and often perfor ...
and
Miss Pussycat Miss (pronounced ) is an English language honorific typically used for a girl, for an unmarried woman (when not using another title such as "Doctor" or "Dame"), or for a married woman retaining her maiden name. Originating in the 17th century, it ...
, MC Tracheotomy and MC Sweet Tea. She was a member of the
9th Ward Marching Band 9 (nine) is the natural number following and preceding . Evolution of the Arabic digit In the beginning, various Indians wrote a digit 9 similar in shape to the modern closing question mark without the bottom dot. The Kshatrapa, Andhra and ...
, an avant-garde marching band founded by
Quintron Quintron (real name Robert Rolston; born c. 1967 in Germany) is an American musician and leader of the eponymous one-man-band, "Quintron". He is a nightclub organist and inventor, who has patented a number of his own inventions and often perfor ...
. In 2006 Kaechele founded Life is Art Foundation , KKProjects, an art space composed of five deteriorating houses in the
St. Roch Roch (lived c. 1348 – 15/16 August 1376/79 (traditionally c. 1295 – 16 August 1327, also called Rock in English, is a Catholic saint, a confessor whose death is commemorated on 16 August and 9 September in Italy; he is especially invoked a ...
neighborhood of New Orleans. The foundation invited local and international artists to create site-specific installations utilizing the houses and surrounding ecological and social environment as medium. Exhibitions included artists from emerging to Tony Oursler, Mel Chin, Keith Sonnier and
Robert Rauschenberg Milton Ernest "Robert" Rauschenberg (October 22, 1925 – May 12, 2008) was an American painter and graphic artist whose early works anticipated the Pop art movement. Rauschenberg is well known for his Combines (1954–1964), a group of artwor ...
. The Life is Art Foundation was founded on an appreciation for ecological systems and natural order. The application of systems-based thinking to life and art was its core mission, as expressed through projects that married art with architecture, ecology, agriculture and human social order. The foundation served as a test site for ideas in these fields. In 2010 Kaechele left KKProjects and moved to Tasmania to join David Walsh and MONA (Museum of Old and New Art). She transformed four of the New Orleans art installation houses into 24 Carrot, a community garden where children grow, cook and sell organic produce. The project introduces vegetables to a food desert, inspires healthy eating and teaches entrepreneurial skills. The project’s 2018 expansion includes a food truck, designed by children in the program, from which they sell dishes prepared with produce they grow. Menus are created by the kids in collaboration with celebrity chefs. Kaechele founded MONA’s 24 Carrot program in Tasmania, a sister garden project in partnership with the Tasmanian Department of Education and private funders. 24 Carrot operates in thirteen primary schools in neighbourhoods of greatest need. Kaechele's curatorial work in the US included a land art exhibition of a living sugar cane field sculpture in rural Louisiana by Norwegian artist Anne Senstad, large-scale, site-specific installations in New Orleans’ City Park and Botanical Gardens for Voodoo Experience, and a medical marijuana farm in California, Life is Art West, which donated all proceeds to the arts. In 2015 Kaechele returned to New Orleans to stage a gun buyback as a conceptual artwork / performance during the New Orleans Biennial, Prospect 3. It was the largest gun buyback in New Orleans’ history and played with libertarian values by using private enterprise and the free market to create gun control. The exhibition, set in an 8th Ward car wash, was promoted on billboards and rap radio stations throughout the city, and opened with performances by bounce and rap artists Big Freedia, Hot Boy Ronald and Mr.Serv On. The installation included a recording studio, The Embassy, where youth could lay tracks with celebrated local rappers for free. The Embassy, intended to run for three months, was so popular that Kaechele decided to keep it open and build a permanent space to house the studio- as part of a larger school. Kaechele is building a school in New Orleans with architects Assemble and Room 11 in an abandoned 9th Ward union hall. The free school will serve 14 - 25 year olds and house The Embassy recording studio, a hacking school, art school, beauty school, fashion school and 24 Carrot culinary art school. All subjects integrate science, technology and social enterprise. The MONA project is a conceptual artwork entitled P5 1 L0V3 Y0U. In 2019, Kaechele launched the Eat the Problem exhibition at MONA: an attempt to draw attention to the problem of invasive species. In addition to an exhibition at the museum, Eat the Problem also involved the launch of a cookbook with dishes created using invasive species, and a number of feasts at MONA. Although well received by some reviewers, the exhibition also caused some controversy, with local newspaper The Mercury running a 'Cats on MONA Menu' headline and The Conservation running an essay calling it a well-meaning but elitist stunt.


Controversy

In 2005, Kaechele began to buy five properties in poor condition on North Villere Street in the St. Roch neighborhood in New Orleans, an area known for gun violence and poverty. In 2006, the five houses became the headquarters of Kaechele's Life is Art Foundation , KK Projects, which staged exhibitions and other events there. Kaechele also converted some of the houses into art pieces: the facade of one house was replaced by an oversized circular bank vault door to create a "safe house"; another was "pierced" by wooden poles and resembled an "architectural voodoo doll." In 2010, when Kaechele moved to Tasmania, she still owned the five properties and left them unoccupied. As a result, the properties deteriorated even further, adding to the neighborhood's blight, and two have been demolished. Kaechele, who owed back property taxes and code enforcement fines on the properties, blamed her inability to maintain the properties on the 2008 recession, and insisted in 2011 that she had always intended for them to be torn down and replaced by "green space". The remaining properties were used by squatters, much to the dismay of local residents.


Personal life

Kaechele lives in Tasmania and is a curator at MONA. In March 2014, Kaechele married art collector and professional gambler David Walsh. Kaechele and Walsh have one child, Sunday Walsh.


Notes


External links


Life is Art WebsiteMONA website: Kirsha's Portal
{{DEFAULTSORT:Kaechele, Kirsha Living people 1976 births People from Topanga, California 20th-century American artists