Arts and Entertainment

Fabric installations at Penn College explore objects, memories

Five panels from Kay Healy’s “Lost and Found” series will be included in her exhibit at The Gallery at Penn College. Credit: Pennsylvania College of Technology / Penn StateCreative Commons

WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. — Objects and memories, transience and stability are explored in “Vestiges,” an exhibit of fabric installations on display May 23 through July 23 in The Gallery at Penn College.

Through her drawn, screen-printed and stuffed fabric creations, Philadelphia artist Kay Healy explores themes of home, memory, displacement and loss. “Vestiges” will showcase more than 50 of the artist’s works, including five panels from the “Lost and Found” series, a life-size installation featuring three-dimensional objects from armchairs to frying pans and guitars to Teletubbies.

The work, based on stories of lost objects from interviews with more than 40 Philadelphians, was originally on display in the Free Library of Philadelphia’s Central Library.

“I am by nature a nostalgic person and am very interested in how an object as mundane as a plastic salad spinner can embody vivid memories of people, events and periods of someone’s life,” Healy said.

Healy spends time interviewing many owners of objects she recreates and offers audio of the interviews on her website: http://kayhealy.com.

Also included in “Vestiges” will be two pieces inspired by Japanese Americans who were forced into American internment camps during World War II. “Miiko’s Purse” and “George’s Argus Camera” attempt to capture precious items that were physically lost to their owners, but whose emotional attachments remain.

“By working with the memories of other people,” Healy said, “I am creating a physical representation of collective recollections, while investigating how a variety of people, who differ in gender, age, race, neighborhood, sexual identity, income and education, all relate to the objects that populate their memories and cope with the fact that there is no way to truly return home.”

Originally from Staten Island, New York, Healy received a bachelor of arts from Oberlin College and a master of fine arts in book arts and printmaking from the University of the Arts, Philadelphia.

In addition to Philadelphia venues such as the Philadelphia International Airport, Healy has had solo exhibits at the Gallery Septima in Tokyo, the University of Alabama in Huntsville, the Delaware Center for the Contemporary Arts, the Pittsburgh Center for the Arts, and a number of other national galleries.

Healy’s artwork is included in the prestigious West Collection, one of the largest private art collections in the country. She has been named a Fellow in the Center for Emerging Visual Artists’ Career Development Program, and she is a recipient of a Leeway Foundation Art and Social Change grant. She also received a NewCourtland Artists Fellowship, which supported a teaching-artist project with seniors in Germantown.

A Meet the Artist Reception is set for 4:30 to 6:30 p.m Thursday, June 29, including an artist’s talk at 5:30 p.m. The reception and exhibit are free and open to the public.

Special summer exhibit hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesdays through Thursdays, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Fridays, and 1 to 4 p.m. on Sundays. The gallery is closed on Saturdays and Mondays.

In addition to serving as an educational resource for Penn College students and a cultural asset to the college and community, the gallery is dedicated to promoting art appreciation through exhibitions of contemporary art.

For more about The Gallery at Penn College, visit www.pct.edu/gallery.

For more about Penn College, a national leader in applied technology education and workforce development, visit www.pct.edu, email admissions@pct.edu or call toll-free 800-367-9222.

Last Updated May 16, 2017