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Riva Lehrer
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    Riva Lehrer

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    Riva Lehrer
    Born 1958
    Cincinnati, Ohio
    Nationality American
    Occupation(s) Artist and Writer
    Known for representations of people who have long been stigmatized

    Riva Lehrer (born in 1958 in Cincinnati, Ohio) is an American painter, writer, teacher, and speaker. Lehrer was born with spina bifida and has undergone numerous surgeries throughout her life. Her work focuses on issues of physical identity and how bodies are viewed by society, especially in explorations of cultural depictions of disability. Lehrer is well known as both an artist and an activist in the field of Disability Culture.

    Early life

    Lehrer's early education took place at Condon School for Handicapped Children,

    which was one of the first schools in the United States to offer a standardized education to disabled children. She had many surgeries in her early life to render her body more "normal". spending a significant part of her childhood in the hospital, she got an intimate view of medicine which influenced her career as an educator and an artist.
    

    In 1980, she moved to Chicago, where she lives and continues to exhibit her work.

    Career

    Lehrer’s work is focused on physical identity and disability. After moving to Chicago, she joined a group for artist’s with disabilities, and began one of her best known series, The Circle Stories. After moving to Chicago, she became aware of the works of other artists, joined a disabled artist group, and began one of her best known series:The Circle Stories. Lehrer is the curator for the Access Living Collection of Art and an adjunct professor at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Her interest in anatomy originally led her to consider a career in medicine, but due to the lack of accommodations she soon felt this goal was unrealistic. Instead she decided on an art career where she would have more control over her schedule and where she could “prove her interests in biology and medicine”. Her works on a whole are meant to reject the idea of pity and inspire a new way of thinking about the beauty of disabilities.

    Lehrer's creative work has been supported through a variety of grants and awards. Awards include the 2017 3Arts MacDowell Fellowship for writing, 2015 3Arts Residency Fellowship at the University of Illinois; the 2014 Carnegie Mellon Fellowship at Haverford and Bryn Mawr Colleges; and the 2009 Prairie Fellowship at the Ragdale Foundation. Grants include the 2009 Critical Fierceness Grant, the 2008 3Arts Foundation Grant, and the 2006 Wynn Newhouse Award for Excellence, (NYC), as well as grants from the Illinois Arts Council, the University of Illinois, and the National Endowment for the Arts.

    Teaching experience

    Lehrer has worked at both the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and Northwestern University.

    Circle Stories

    Lehrer began The Circle Stories series in 1997 and continued expanding it through 2004. The Circle Stories is a series of portraits of Lehrer's fellow disabled artists. The title of the series refers to the "circular" method that Lehrer employed in the creative process, "involving extensive interviews with each participant." In her work, she aims to honor the “community of disabled innovators who provide support and context for the work of redefinition of disability in the 21st century".

    Other series

    Lehrer's If Body series stems from the fact that people tend to visualize what they are going to look like at an older age and how that image can change over time. The pieces themselves represent her personal ideals about her body and how those ideals have changed over time. “The self-portraits of her If Body series chart this schism between the imaginary “normal” body I imagine I “should” have had, and my relationship to my subjective “actual” body".

    The Family series breaks the stereotype and myth that disabled people are loners. It goes on to show that people, disabled or not, form links, connections, and relationships with others. Lehrer explains “The Family drawings are an ongoing document of my own community of belonging. Some are blood relations, others are people who I consider part of my survival. They are a testament to the power that human beings have to transform each others lives”.

    The Totems and Familiars series are portraits that focus on people's objects of power (totems) and alter egos (familiars,) and how this iconography "helped (her subjects) through troubled times."

    Golem Girl

    Lehrer's 2020 book Golem Girl: a memoir, published by Virago, was the first winner of the Barbellion Prize, a literary award for writers who live with illness or disability. It was also a finalist for the 2020 National Book Critics Circle Award for Memoir and Autobiography. In Kirkus Reviews it was described as "An extraordinary memoir suffused with generosity, consistent insight, and striking artwork."

    Exhibits

    • AIR Gallery
    • Aldrich Museum of Contemporary Art (Ridgefield, CT),
    • Arnot Museum
    • Chicago Cultural Center
    • DeCordova Museum (Lincoln, MA).
    • Elmhurst Museum
    • Frye Art Museum (Seattle, WA),
    • Herron Gallery at Indiana University
    • Lafayette Museum of Art
    • Mary Leigh Bloch Museum
    • Mobile Museum of Art
    • Muskegon Museum of Art (MI),
    • National Museum of Women in the Arts (Washington, D.C.),
    • Printworks Gallery (Chicago)
    • Riverside Arts Center
    • Susan Cummis Gallery
    • United Nations (NY)
    • University of Notre Dame

    Selected publications

    Awards, achievements, and recognitions

    • 2020 · Barbellion Prize for Golem Girl
    • 2017 · Society for Disability Studies Presidential Award
    • 2015 · 3Arts Residency Fellowship at the University of Illinois
    • 2014 · Mellon Residency Fellowship at Haverford and Bryn Mawr Colleges
    • 2010 · The Critical Fierceness Grant
    • 2009 · Prairie Fellowship at the Ragdale Foundation
    • 2008 · Three Arts Foundation of Chicago grant for artistic achievement
    • 2007 · Wynn Newhouse Award, Samuel I. Newhouse Foundation
    • 2006 · Wynn Newhouse Award for Excellence (an unrestricted grant for $50,000)
    • 2001 · Carol J. Gill Award for Disability Culture, The Progress Center, Chicago
    • 1999 · Chicago Artist's Assistance Program Grant, Chicago Department of Cultural Affair
    • 1999 · Special Assistance Grant, Illinois Arts Council
    • 1998 · Honorable Mention, Portrait Show, Elmhurst Art Museum
    • 1996-97 · Arts Midwest/NEA Regional Visual Arts Fellowship Award
    • 1993-95 · Presidential Merit Scholarship, The School of the Art Institute, Chicago
    • 1994 · Scholarship, Anderson Ranch, Snowmass CO
    • 1993 · First Prize, Schoharie National Small Works Show
    • 1992 · Honorable Mention, Schoharie National Small Works Show

    External links

    External links


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