Unknown's avatar

About Lisa Lesniak

Born in Springfield, MA and lives in Los Angeles, CA. Her work is informed by historic textiles, fashion, dance and the human form. Life drawing has grounded her studio practice since her teenage years. Her professional life began at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum where she worked in the textile conservation lab for many years. She went on to work in wardrobe departments for major motion pictures in the Boston area where she was known for her work in aging, dyeing and distressing costumes and fabric. She has both dressed and designed for well- known musicians, actors and background players. She came to All Saints Episcopal Church, Beverly Hills to promote temporary employment opportunities with the 2010 Census. She learned of the church’s work with in-need populations. Having had begun orientation at a mission in Los Angeles’ Skid Row, she found that she could support homeless and at-risk individuals closer to where she lived. She was invited to take on processing clothing donations and taking clothing orders from the Monday lunch guests. She was right at-home in the clothing storeroom and began to fine-tune its organization. She began each week, dressing those in need according to the notes she takes about individual style and color preferences. She matched donated clothing as closely to the wishes of each guest’s request. It is hands-on, and hand-to-hand work that brings her to the heart of prayer in the tactility of contemplation. Her work had taken on a measure of economic redress—recycling garments from those in abundance to those in need. She earned a BA in Art at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst with a Ford Foundation Award in 2D Design and an MFA in Fiber from Cranbrook Academy of Art with the Jack Lenor Larsen Scholarship for her second year of study. She has participated in solo and group exhibitions in Los Angeles, in her native Massachusetts and elsewhere.

Images from the exhibition: “Among You”

“Among You”

You will always have the poor among you, but you will not always have me.  —John 12:8 NIV

The work is a meditation on the beauty and humanity found on the mean streets.

You who dwell at the margins

of your community are

brought to light

within the architecture of these birch panels.

At the moment of your gaze,

the space between guest and host merges and

a calligraphic imprint in the heart of the city remains.

I dedicate this work to all those who find their way to the patio for conversation, or music, or a meal, or clothing and essentials, or worship.  I am grateful to the people who have willingly allowed me to photograph them for the purposes of making this art.  The net proceeds support the church’s homeless mission.

Within these economic times, many programs that offer direct care to those in need go underfunded or close.  The Monday lunches provide a refuge for each attendee from internal or external hardships encountered in his or her daily life.  Here, inclusivity for all is cultivated in a town of exclusivities for the few.  Compassion resides in the in-taking from wherever you come.

The drawings take days to emerge and it is a heartfelt goodbye once they are released from the charcoal at-hand.  I chose charcoal as it best conveys the grit of the street.  Many years ago I met with a friend who had just returned from a backpacking tour abroad.  I was struck by the quality of her India-print skirt so similar to mine yet so different.  Later, I came to realize that it was the sand, the constant wear on the fibers, and the weight of the dirt that made it thus.

Clothing often is given from those who have passed away.  The love of the lost one is found anew.  This work of compassion involves the clothing off your back, on your back, your countenance, your gestures in all your singularity and humanity through drawing the weight of your world.  In a community where surface appearance holds sway, I am drawn to you.

Lisa Lesniak

March 2012

Pop-up: Art exhibition March 16, 2012

Image

Art Exhibition – Among You: Drawn to Compassion

  • Friday, March 16, 6:00 pm – 9:30 pm
  • All Saints’ Episcopal Church
  • 504 N. Camden Drive
  • (Corner of Santa Monica Blvd.)
  • Beverly Hills, CA 90210

Net proceeds of all sales to benefit All Saints‘ Homeless Assistance Services

Visual artist and costume designer Lisa Lesniak has created 30 moving portraits of guests who grace the All Saints’ Parish patio each week for the Monday meal for the homeless.

The Homeless "Among You": What Lisa Lesniak's Compassionate Art Makes Visible


“In a community where surface appearance holds sway, I am drawn to you.”