Daisy Patton is a multi-disciplinary artist born in Los Angeles, CA to a white mother from the American South and an Iranian father she never met. She spent her childhood moving between California and Oklahoma, deeply affected by these conflicting cultural landscapes and the ambiguous absences within her family. Influenced by collective and political histories, Patton explores storytelling and story-carrying, the meaning and social conventions of families, and what shapes living memory. Her work also examines in-between spaces and identities, including the fallibility of the body and the complexities of relationship and connection. Currently residing in western Massachusetts, Patton has exhibited in solo and group shows nationally, including solo exhibitions at the CU Art Museum at the University of Colorado, the Chautauqua Institution, and the Fulginitti Pavilion at the Center for Bioethics at the Anschutz Medical Campus, as well as group shows with Spring/Break NYC, the Katonah Museum of Art, The Delaware Contemporary, the International Museum of Science and Art, and the Susquehanna Art Museum among others. She has paintings held in public and private collections such as the Denver Art Museum; the Tampa Museum of Art, the Ulrich Museum of Art, Wichita State University, KS; the University Museum of Contemporary Art at UMass Amherst; the Mattatuck Museum, Waterbury CT; Fidelity Investments Art Collection, and the Delta Airlines collection at both Boston Logan and Hartsfield-Jackson international airports, among others. Patton’s work has been featured in publications such as New American Painting, Hyperallergic, The Jealous Curator, Transition Magazine, The Denver Post, The Chautauquan Daily, The Seattle Met, and more. Minerva Projects Press has published Broken Time Machines: Daisy Patton, a book with essays and poetry on Patton’s practice that debuted spring of 2021. Patton has completed artist residencies at Anderson Ranch, the Studios at MASS MoCA, RedLine Denver, Minerva Projects, and Eastside International in Los Angeles. She has been awarded a Massachusetts Cultural Council Grant, a Barbara Deming Memorial Fund Grant, an Assets for Artists Massachusetts Matched Savings Grant, a Montage Travel Award from SMFA for research in Dresden, Germany, as well as longlisted for the Aesthetica Prize 2022. She earned her MFA from The School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston/Tufts University, a multi-disciplinary program and has a BFA in Studio Arts from the University of Oklahoma with minors in History and Art History and an Honors degree.
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