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Lonna Kelly

Along the roadsides you can find remarkable displays of quirkiness, independence, patriotism, and artistry. On my day-to-day travels a camera is my most constant companion and I often stop to take pictures. Whether it’s a farmer painting a mural on a barn, a house draped in flags, graffiti commenting on the state of the union, a family constructed of hay bales, a street singer dressed in a negligee and heels – I find it a form of folk art. 

It’s fleeting. It’s fascinating to me.

I am drawn to large parades and exuberant crowds, photographing the Women’s March on NY, NYC Dance Parade, and SantaCon in the years leading up to the pandemic.

Poster at womens march on NY shows statue of liberty and text I'm wiht her
Women’s March on NYC
night time on highway misty and mysterious
No One at the Wheel

gold weathered statue of liberty from tablet up against sunlit old brick building
Liberty Series, Poughkeepsie, NY

During 2020-21 the world become much smaller. I began an interactive community project, Synergy, to keep connected with other creatives. Posing a suggestion, I would ask people to respond to the prompt. Inspired by mail art, this art was emailed and posted to a website created for the collaboration LonnaKellyStudio.com

My international Mail Art project brought responses from over 60 artists from Dutchess County to Germany, Italy and England.

As for photography, as I worked through the year, I became focused on a smaller vision – what I was finding in the sky and at my feet. Every day that I went to the park to run, I shot the same tree with an ever-changing sky backdrop, the Pandemic Sky. At my feet I found plants, mushrooms, and discarded objects for closeup. A photo technique used to capture sunbeams and the reflections they can produce created surreal photographs that I like to think of as potential portals.  From the earth to the sky, nature sustained me. 

Collaborations and community have become a large focus. My postcard series 2016-present represents a mail-art project in which I ask people to take my designed postcard, modify it in any way, and return to me by mail.  

Four heads outlined on grey railroad trestle with open mouths, long noses large teeth
Post Card Series
Four heads outlined on grey railroad trestle with open mouths and artist additions with text me me me mine mine I I I
Post Card Wendy Alvarez

2021 Art Reborn: 100 Mannequins is a collaborative project financed by the Daniel & Trudy Regan Foundation, with over 100 mannequins given to artists to modify.

mannequin torso with new coat of gold color paint cluttered background
Mannequin dressed in black sleeveless dress covered with photos topped with white dress more photos and artist lonna kelly

My mannequin, Our Mothers/Ourselves celebrates Mothers but also recognizes the complex relationship children/daughters have with their Mom’s and incorporates fiber, photographs and text. Backwards printing of quotes from family and friends forces the viewer to read, think about the content, and how communication in families is so easily misinterpreted. Recent attacks on women’s rights dictated that I address the fact that women, and so many others, in this country remain second class citizens.

https://LonnaKelly.com                                        https://LonnaKellyStudio.com

LonnaKellyStudio@gmail.com

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