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Best known for her allegorical paintings of mutant plants
and animals in languishing, overgrown landscape settings or
posed as though for classical still life or portraiture,
Laurie Hogin's interests include examining human impulses,
desires, and needs, including pleasure, intoxication, addiction,
the erotic, totem, violence, greed, grief, and love. These
aspects of human experience and identity, resultant of the
interplay of evolutionary biology and culture, find expression
in the history of visual culture as well as in the nearly
schizoid array of cultural material and commodity in
contemporary consumer capital. Hogin combines various
tropes from the history of painting, natural history and
scientific display, pornography, fashion photography and
retail display with narrative allegory, often describing
political, social, economic, and emotional phenomena.
Hogin's research interests also include cognitive approaches
to understanding visual culture and creativity, and the
application of theories of propaganda, pictorial narrative
and imaginary space to visual materials intended for
specific educational purposes. Recent and current projects
include the design and implementation of a visually-based
nutrition education program for elementary school children,
and the design of a program for a community youth service
organization to guide teens through the process of setting
up a small, sustainable clothing design business. These
projects, along with Hogin's ongoing studio practice and
exhibition career, inform her teaching.
Hogin's work has been exhibited nationally and internationally
for more than 20 years, including the Museum of Contemporary
Art, Chicago, IL; the Addison Gallery of American Art, Andover,
MA; Contemporary Art Center, New Orleans, LA; Frederick R.
Weisman Museum of Art, Malibu, CA; Norton Museum, Palm Beach,
FL; Contemporary Arts Center, Cincinnati, OH; Kemper Museum,
Kansas City, MO; State of Illinois Museums at Chicago and
Springfield, IL; John Michael Kohler Arts Center, Sheboygan,
WI; International Print Center of New York; Scottsdale Museum
of Contemporary Art, AZ, Museum of Fine Arts, Albuquerque, NM.
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