exhibitions:: publications
One of the first artists to work in digital processes, Hodgkin's work is based on an awe of the invisible world revealed by science. Using reference materials from neuroscience to physics her work transforms a microcosm that has emerged through scientific imaging. In this process she incorporates an emerging digital language into the historic tradition of painting.
Hodgkin's solo shows have ranged from New York; Cincinati and San Francisco to Tokyo, Japan and New Delhi, India. Her work has been featured in group shows at museums and galleries in the United States, Japan, India and Europe including "The Digital Body", ZKM Center for Art & Media in Karlsruhe, Germany and "Excess in the Technomediacratic Society", Musée Dole, France. In 1998 she exhibited a brief survey of her work at Nature Morte Gallery in New Delhi.
Public commissions include "TRAJECTORIES", a 3-story digitally-based mosaic mural for Remsen Hall Science Building at Queens College, New York. Hodgkin has been awarded fellowships from the Gottlieb Foundation the Pollock Krasner Foundation , the New York Foundation for the Arts, Artists Space and Dieu Donne Papermill, New York. In 2002, she received a WTC Recovery grant from the New York Foundation for the Arts.
Her work has been discussed and reviewed in such publications as Artforum, Art in America, Arts Magazine, Bomb Magazine, Flash Art, Art Press, Artbyte, the Los Angeles Times, Artweek, New Observations, Contemporanea, and The New Yorker. Her work is included public and private collections including the U.S. Art in Embassies Program, and the Library of Congress.
She lives and works in New York City