Kim McCollum | The Unmakers
to
Art Gallery of Grande Prairie 103-9839 103 Ave, Grande Prairie, Alberta T8V 6M7

Kim McCollum, “Grid Makers II,” 2022
acrylic and oil on canvas, 16" x 20" (courtesy of the Gallery)
Kim McCollum is a multidisciplinary artist based in Treaty 6 territory (Edmonton, Alberta). Working in a variety of mediums, including painting, collage and textiles, weaving is at the heart of her practice. In 2019, she co-founded a collaborative weaving studio called Gather Textiles, and has created a remarkable community, emphasising teaching and learning between a diverse pool of makers. The generous energy and exchange fostered by McCollum’s shared weaving studio influences all aspects of her practice.
At the core of McCollum’s work is the grid: an essential structure prevalent in our everyday world. At first glance, the grid is a symbol of order, used to plot, map, build and hold things together. A defining icon of western 20th century Modernism, the grid is fundamental to movements such as Cubism, de Stijl, Constructivism and Minimalism. However, beyond the facade of order, the grid is also a curious contradiction, capable of transcending its own logic. As art critic Rosalind Krauss put it, “The grid’s mythic power is that it makes us able to think we are dealing with materialism (or sometimes science, or logic) while at the same time it provides us with a release into belief (or illusion, or fiction).”¹
In McCollum’s work, she begins with the grid, or the idea of the grid. In earlier paintings from 2021, she uses it to reference the warp and weft of threads– the basis of weaving cloth. In this work, each stitch is represented by a painted square, the resulting compositions are meticulous abstractions, with a nod to textile patterns. By exaggerating such intricacies, McCollum sheds a light on the skill, discipline and time that weaving requires, which goes largely unnoticed, unseen. Elevating tiny stitches to the cannon of abstract painting is a power-move, drawing attention to the importance of invisible labour traditionally performed by women in society, such as childcare, cleaning, mending and emotional intelligence. Such tasks, and more, are still culturally understood as women’s work, and remain largely undervalued. This fact is perhaps most simply illustrated by the global gender pay gap. Locally it is currently 67¢ (earned by women) to every dollar (earned by men) in Grande Prairie.²
In The Unmakers, McCollum continues her investigation of the grid, this time pushing its narrative capacity. Building from her weaving-based abstractions, she blithely disrupts the grid. The new body of work presents figures who emerge from this structure. They are busy (un) making their own world. The grid works for them as opposed to the other way around. In Grid Maker and Grid Makers II the figures appear to be blowing bubbles, expanding and warping the grid like balloons. Through this practice, it could be imagined that they are exchanging information, as though the bubbles are a means of communication, a new language.
With play and confidence, McCollum presents a kind of woven fiction, revealing aspects of the creative process. Like Walter Womacka’s socialist mosaic Unser Leben (Our Life) 1964, which wraps around the building Haus des Lehrers (House of the Teacher) in former East Berlin, McCollum’s figures diligently depict the construction of their imagined realities. In Unser Leben, a wide range of citizens joyfully go about their business, from scientists to students to artists, the mural idealises everyday life and work. In McCollum’s pieces, hands are frozen mid-gesture, holding fragments of patterned swatches. Eyes are squinted sharply in concentration, carefully considering their next move. In The Unmakers’ world, the protagonists are feminine, joyfully and carefully, proposing alternative possibilities for the future.