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BublikArt Gallery > Blog > Artists > Lisa Lackey: The Subtle Power of Seeing Differently
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Lisa Lackey: The Subtle Power of Seeing Differently

Irina Runkel
Last updated: 24 December 2025 10:49
Published 24 December 2025
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3 Min Read
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Lisa Lackey: Elevating the Everyday

Lackey’s work begins not with grand narratives but with the uneventful moments most people pass right by. She notices shapes, both simple and complex, forming in the daily world: sunlight filtering through a fence, a subway grate, a red door, the geometry of a shopping cart, or a row of benches creating rhythm across a public square. She captures these encounters quickly on her phone, not as documentation but as a small act of recognition: I saw this. In her video Bits & Pieces, the camera lingers on the realities of that transformation. She jokes that she does not want to wait for a vacation to encounter something vivid; she wants it now, likening the discovery to glancing down and finding a four-leaf clover.

The translation from image to textile is both analytical and emotional. She begins with structure, using outlines, patterns, and perspective, then chooses fabrics with the precision of someone mixing color: sheer organza or chiffon to soften a shadow, a lightly striped cotton to suggest direction and light, a matte weave to absorb it. In Bits & Pieces, drawers open to reveal an organized chaos of scraps and thread, and we watch her select, press, cut, and assemble until the scene reappears, piece by piece. “It’s such a pleasure to create something out of nothing, out of scraps of fabric, out of bits,” she says. The line lands with impact because the labor is visible: hours, days, or weeks, depending on what it takes, until the external moment and her internal associations settle into the same surface.

Her style is defined by a delicate balance of rigor and openness. There is an architectural clarity in her crisp angles and strong sense of perspective, balanced by a willingness to let scale bend or reflections introduce small surprises. She is drawn to surfaces that double or distort, such as shadow lattices, transparency, and mirrored imagery, so that an ordinary scene gains a slight charge. Her palette often leans restrained, with earth tones, soft grays, and matte blacks, punctuated by a saturated accent that reads like an emotional cue: a blue bench, a field of red, a sudden green. The result feels like an internal monologue made visible, precise in its construction and quietly playful in the way it allows meaning to remain open.

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