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Artist Lori Gordon

The tiny hamlet of Clermont Harbor, on the beach just to the west of Bay St. Louis and Waveland, is home to an artist whose work may be found in countries around the world.

Lori K. Gordon first appeared in the national spotlight when one of her pieces was acquired by the Smithsonian Institution. The Katrina Collection, her series of mixed media assemblages which incorporates debris from Hurricane Katrina, has also found a wide audience, both nationwide and in Europe.

Gordon, a South Dakota native, made the Mississippi Gulf Coast her home some twenty years ago. In 2000, she befriended Celestine Labat of Bay St. Louis. Gordon realized immediately that the 102 year old Creole woman was a national treasure,and began to record Ms. Labat’s stories. The result of their meetings was the 8’x10’ art quilt “Labat: A Creole Legacy”, now housed in the Smithsonian’s permanent collection.


By 2005 Gordon was concentrating on painting, capturing on canvas the bayous and marshes of her beloved home. Her life was upended when Hurricane Katrina struck on August 29. With her home, studio, a large body of work and all of her supplies washed away by the 43 foot storm surge and 150 mile per hour winds which obliterated her community, Gordon returned to work using the only materials available to her. Within weeks, she was creating art from the rubble. Pieces from The Katrina Collection have been acquired by the Mississippi Humanities Council, the Safeco Corporate Collection, and the Thea Foundation and William J. Clinton Foundation’s Art Across Arkansas. She has been commissioned by the national organization ADPSR and by the State of Mississippi, and her work may be found in private collections nationwide, in six Western European nations, and in the Far East. Her work has been featured on MSNBC, National Public Radio’s All Things Considered, the Associated Press, and Mississippi Public Broadcasting. Print articles on her work have appeared in Art Gulf Coast, Going Coastal, South Mississippi Living, and Mississippi Magazine.

As the artist continues to create new works in The Katrina Collection, she is also exploring new avenues of expression. “Reliquary: Images of the Sacred” is a series of altars, shrines and reliquaries which explore our ideas of the sacred in our lives. It is a natural extension of The Katrina Collection, which was conceived as a metaphor for rebirth. Gordon is also working on the second stage of The Labat Project. Designed with a national audience in mind, this
endeavor will incorporate Ms. Labat’s oral history and family photographs in the form of a traveling exhibition. The work of Lori K. Gordon may be found in several locations on the coast, as well as on the worldwide web. She has studios in Clermont Harbor and in Henley field, MS, another small community located an hour northwest of Bay St. Louis and an hour north of New Orleans. Visitors are welcome at both locations. She is a member of a group of artists in Bay St. Louis who rallied immediately after Katrina, formed a co-op and opened their door just five weeks after the storm. Gordon’s husband is David “Cairo” Wheeler, a woodworker and fellow member of the co-op, whose work may be found in the Clermont Harbor and Bay St. Louis locations.

Gordon also writes on the arts, and teaches workshops in collage d’art. A short documentary on Gordon’s work has recently been produced, and is available through the artist and may be viewed online.

 

GORDON EMAIL:
lorikgordon@gmail.com

VIDEO ON THE WORK OF LORI K. GORDON:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=
2196437802153719097&pr=goog-sl  

GORDON BLOGS:
http://thekatrinacollectionbylorikgordon.

www.blogspot.com  

http://lorikgordon.blogspot.com

http://gordonmixedmedia.blogspot.com

ON THE WEB:
http://www.theartofthestorm.com

http://www.mississippison.com

 

 


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