Francesca DiMattio
A biography
Francesca DiMattio’s practice draws on the history of craft and the decorative arts, re-evaluating their narratives through a feminist lens while reimagining the role and meaning of adornment. Elements typically perceived as ornamental, such as beading, knitting, and flower arranging, become infectious, contradicting the forms they envelop with an ominous tone. While using an often domestic medium—ceramic—she surprises the viewer with towering, seemingly impossible forms. Her sculptures counter traditional expectations, each work a gathering of opposites: male and female, animal and human, animate and inanimate. Her process, at once destructive and creative, imbues the resulting hybrid with instability. In this way, DiMattio explores conflicting notions of womanhood, presenting feminine identity as a precarious balancing act, full of contrasting possibilities.
Informed by her early painting, epic polyptychs of dizzying architectural forms, DiMattio’s sculptures combine the fractured dynamism of her painting with the weighty materiality of clay. She mines the narrative of sculpture and ceramics to trace how imagery moves through history. Ranging from Ming vases, Sèvres porcelain, and Wedgwood china to disposable knick-knacks, these associations display shifting notions of value and desire. By translating each reference by hand and underlining formal similarities, she compresses time and space, making her seemingly disparate objects seem more cohesive. Highlighting this instability of meaning, DiMattio collapses hierarchies between high and low culture, destabilising fixed perceptions of identity, and underlining the surprising closeness of opposing qualities, both cultural and material.