Alexa Kanarowski: The Window Won’t Shut All the Way

Opening 09.05.25, 7 pm

Alexa Kanarowski: The Window Won’t Shut All the Way

09.05.25 – 09.24.25

Opening Reception Friday, September 5, 7-10PM

When we look out a window, does the landscape look back in? The Window Won’t Shut All the Way investigates the meaning of glass, and the inability to fully separate ourselves from what we see.

Photographic media imposed on glass forms grapples with the passage of time and the vernacular landscape. Squares and grids appear repeatedly throughout the work. Often altered or in a sense of decay, the grid is reminiscent of city blocks and the changes they undergo over time. By using imperfect squares, the work takes on a confused identity. Highlighting the transparent qualities of glass with a muted color scheme, Kanarowski engages the viewer in both what is and what has been. The expected language of stained glass is subverted to engage with the simple language of a plain window, and the landscape that is seen through a window. Much of the glass is found, further solidifying the connection between the built environment, the work, and ghosts of a time gone by. 

Combined with glass, Kanarowski uses the technique of Polaroid emulsion lifts to create ghostly images. Whether pasted on the surface of a piece or sandwiched between glass like a sample between microscope slides, the photographs become a part of the glass and emphasize its fragility. 

The process of Polaroid emulsion lifts makes physical the notion of time. Because they are taken with a Polaroid camera, the images must be transferred to glass within hours of their exposure. The process itself is prone to unexpected results, allowing the one-of-a-kind image to take on its own form and autonomy. Shooting in the square format of Polaroids places further emphasis on the grid like structures that appear throughout the work, while encouraging a simplistic approach to composition. 

This body of work also engages in tensions between art and craft. Working with a craft like stained glass, Kanarowski both accedes to and distances herself from the rules of the media. Her reliance on grids brings her back to a motif that is often present in her practice, quilts and patchwork. In Refuse Quilt, Kanarowski takes this quite literally, crafting a quilt out of the waste products of Polaroid Emulsion lifts, and the haunting ephemeral landscapes they produce.  

Alexa Kanarowski is a photographer based in Buffalo, New York. Through investigating systems that combine to make our present moment, she focuses on the landscape, cultural, and systemic patchworks that contribute to defining the everchanging now. Frequently working in photo series, Kanarowski creates quilt-like narratives that are sensitive to memory, labor, and landscape. In addition to photobooks, her practice encompasses craft practices, using stained glass and sewing to further elucidate the patchwork nature of the contemporary moment.

Kanarowski is a member of the Buffalo Institute for Contemporary Art’s BICA School. She holds a Bachelor of Fine Arts from Cornell University, and her work has been exhibited throughout New York State, such as a solo show at the Johnson Museum of Art (Ithaca, NY). She has been the recipient of multiple awards and grants, including the Edith Adams and Walter King Stone Memorial Prize and the Gibian Rosewater Traveling Research Award.

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