Organizer: School of Art
Venue: Center for Creative Photography
Start Time: 5:30pm

Jennifer Ling Datchuk will discuss how her studio practice is informed by the power in materials like porcelain, hair, and domestic objects. She will explore how research, personal narratives, lived experiences, and oral histories are foundations for making work about identity.

Jennifer Ling Datchuk is an artist born in Warren, Ohio and raised in Brooklyn, New York. Her work is an exploration of her layered identity – as a woman, a Chinese woman, as an “American,” as a third culture kid. Trained in ceramics, Datchuk works with porcelain and other materials often associated with traditional women’s work, such as textiles and hair, to discuss fragility, beauty, femininity, intersectionality, identity, and personal history.

Babe Cave porcelain beads, fake hair, hair clips, wood, paracord rope, cheerleader pom poms 96” x 96” x 120”2019

Her practice evolved from sculpture to mixed media as she began to focus on domestic objects and the feminine sphere. Handwork and hair both became totems of the small rituals that fix, smooth over, and ground women’s lives. Through these materials, she explores how Western beauty standards influenced the East, how the non-white body is commodified and sold, and how women’s – globally, girls’ – work is still a major economic driver whose workers still struggle for equality.

Datchuk holds an MFA in Artisanry from the University of Massachusetts Dartmouth and a BFA in Crafts from Kent State University. She has received grants from the Artist Foundation of San Antonio, travel grant from Artpace, and the Linda Lighton International Artist Exchange Program to research the global migrations of porcelain and blue and white pattern decoration. She was awarded a residency through the Blue Star Contemporary Art Museum to conduct her studio practice at the Künstlerhaus Bethanien in Berlin, Germany and has participated in residencies at the Pottery Workshop in Jingdezhen, China, Vermont Studio Center, European Ceramic Work Center in the Netherlands and Artpace in San Antonio, Texas.

In 2017, she received the Emerging Voices award from the American Craft Council and in 2020 was named a United States Artist Fellow in Craft. Her work has been featured in a solo publication “Jennifer Ling Datchuk: Half” through French and Michigan in San Antonio, TX, and included in “Artpace at 25”, “Black Cube: A Nomadic Museum”, the Guardian, Vogue, and American Craft Magazine. Her work is in the collection at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston. She is an Assistant Professor of Studio Artat Texas State University and lives and maintains a studio practice in San Antonio, Texas.

In 2016, she opened the Porcelain Power Factory, a small ceramic line that reclaims the past lives of objects to raise the social awareness of causes that we need to fight for. Motivated by Trump’s body-shaming and brags of sexual assault, this work is made to empower women’s movements. The functional works are a statement of resistance and feminism and a way to give back.


The School of Art focuses on bringing renowned and diverse artists and scholars from around the world to our campus. These visitors bring their own unique influences to the program by engaging with community members, students, and faculty through salons, lectures, and exhibitions.

Featured Image
American Flag digital documented performance porcelain beads from Jingdezhen, China, fake hair, steel rack, collected affirmations 2020
Featured Image
Hit Me with Your Best Shot 16” x 20” digital print Hahnemuhle Fine Art Pearl 285gsm paper Made in China Cuban link iced out bracelet, water jet cut Lenox Oxford China porcelain plates from the Confederacy Collection for The White House of the Confederacy, nails from Glaze Nail Lounge originally commissioned by Artpace, San Antonio 2019
School of Art Website

Plan your Arizona Experience with the Planning Tool

Launch
wave

You might also like

April 28

Time Travelers

In 2024, the Tucson
In 2024, the Tucson
Learn More
Venue: Tucson Museum of Art
Start Time: 10:00am
Tickets:

General | $15
Senior and Educator | $12
College Student | $10
Free for TMA members

Time Travelers

Time TravelersLEARN MORE Time Travelers
May 8

Magic Hour 2024

School of Theatre, Film & Television
Short fiction films
Short fiction films
Learn More
Venue: Marroney Theatre
Start Time: 6:00pm

Magic Hour 2024

Magic Hour 2024LEARN MORE Magic Hour 2024
May 4

I Dream in Widescreen 2024

School of Theatre, Film & Television
Join us for
Join us for
Learn More
Venue: Fox Tucson Theatre
Start Time: 7:00pm

I Dream in Widescreen 2024

I Dream in Widescreen 2024LEARN MORE I Dream in Widescreen 2024
June 6

Virtual Art Trivia Happy Hour: Sun!

University of Arizona Museum of Art
The sun, with all those
The sun, with all those
Learn More
Venue: Virtual
Start Time: 5:00pm

Virtual Art Trivia Happy Hour: Sun!

Virtual Art Trivia Happy Hour: Sun!LEARN MORE Virtual Art Trivia Happy Hour: Sun!