Radio and PodcastRadio and PodcastLive Radio & Podcasts
Exploring Race, Class, and Social Standing though Painting with Artist Kyle Hackett artwork
Arts

Exploring Race, Class, and Social Standing though Painting with Artist Kyle Hackett

I Like Your Work by Erika b Hess

Apr 3, 202647:11Arts

Kyle Hackett's paintings explore race, class, and social standing through approaches to self-representation and the constructed image. Hackett (b. Still Pond, MD) earned his MFA from the LeRoy E. Hoffberger School of Pai...

About This Episode

Exploring Race, Class, and Social Standing though Painting with Artist Kyle Hackett is an episode from I Like Your Work by Erika b Hess. Kyle Hackett's paintings explore race, class, and social standing through approaches to self-representa...

Podcast

This episode belongs to I Like Your Work.

Listen Online

Use the player on this page to stream the episode online.

Episode Details

Published Apr 3, 2026, 47:11 long, audio available.

Questions About This Episode

What is Exploring Race, Class, and Social Standing though Painting with Artist Kyle Hackett about?

Kyle Hackett's paintings explore race, class, and social standing through approaches to self-representation and the constructed image. Hackett (b. Still Pond, MD) earned his MFA from the LeRoy E. Hoffberger School of Painting at Maryland Institute College of Art and his BFA in Fine Arts from the University of Delaware. He has received numerous honors and awards, including the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities Artist Fellowship, the Civil Society Institute Fellowship at the Vermont Studio Center Residency, the Ruth Katzman Scholarship at The League Residency in New York, and Best in Show at the 2014 Bethesda Painting Awards Exhibition. His work has been featured in publications such as New American Paintings, The Washington Post, HuffPost, Aesthetica Magazine (UK) and is published in the British Library. Hackett received a Mayoral Salute from the City of Baltimore for his solo exhibition "Rate of Contingency." Recent exhibitions include The Ruth Borchard 2025 Self Portrait Prize (UK); The Herbert Smith Freehills 2024 Portrait Award Exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery (London, UK); "Revisit/Reimagine" at the Banneker-Douglass-Tubman Museum (Annapolis, MD) and "Circular Narratives" at Vinegar Projects (Birmingham, AL). Hackett's work is represented by Goya Contemporary Gallery (Baltimore, MD). His work is part of collections at Ethan Cohen Gallery (New York) the DC Commission on the Arts and Humanities, Capital One Lounge at Washington Dulles International Airport, the Soho House Art Collection, among others. Hackett is Assistant Professor and co-director of the MFA Studio Art Program at American University (Washington, DC). "My work explores race, class, and social standing through approaches to self-representation and the constructed image. Inspired by nineteenth- and twentieth-century portraiture and precarious modes of depiction, I deconstruct ideas of secure identity and fixed painting techniques through subtexts of the staged, self-aware portrait. Referencing contraptions, braces, or postures from early photography that might objectify and hold a sitter in place, I relate image-making, inflection, and fixedness to concepts of double consciousness. A connected body of work involves vanitas still-life paintings created from discarded self-portrait reference photographs. Quickly compressed, twisted, fixed, bound, doubled, and hung, the discarded images take on new forms. Meanwhile, the slower process of making each painting becomes a living record and reflection on the initial need to discard the reference. Within this process, my work combines the power dynamic and politic of the picture plane. I examine how authenticity, self-referential source materials and painting methods can articulate systems of identity, representation, and contemporary power structures within and against the conventions of historical genres, such as portrait painting. I highlight how constructing images can construct new relations to serve as a framework for institutional and personal identity-making. Often using indirect glazing to layer an image, I consider how content exists in between spaces, subjects, and beneath painted surfaces. How can slowing down the viewing process challenge the conditions between the image, surface, and material? At the same time, how can this reveal insights into the painter's psychological state and the painting? By emphasizing conflicts between inner and outer, I hope to foster simultaneous ways of being understood beyond position and as human." LINKS: kylehackettstudio.com " aria-disabled="true"> @kylehackettstudio Artist Shoutout: Charles Mason III: @tarem3 Tim Doud: @timdoud_art Thank You to our Sponsor Rise and Repaint: riseandrepaint.com/ilyw I Like Your Work Links: Apply to the Chautauqua School of Art Residency Program: art.chq.org Join Patreon: Apply to be a Studio Visit Artist: Pre-order our catalog: Have a question you want Erika to discuss in a mini episode? Email it to ilikeyourworkpodcast@gmail.com with the subject "mini eps" Join Erika in Italy at Umbria Contemporary Arts this Summer: Join the Works Membership! Watch our Youtube channel: Submit Your Work Check out our Catalogs! Exhibitions Studio Visit Artist Interviews I Like Your Work Podcast Say "hi" on Instagram

Where can I listen to Exploring Race, Class, and Social Standing though Painting with Artist Kyle Hackett?

You can listen to Exploring Race, Class, and Social Standing though Painting with Artist Kyle Hackett online on Radio and Podcast. Open the player on this page to stream the available audio.

Which podcast is Exploring Race, Class, and Social Standing though Painting with Artist Kyle Hackett from?

Exploring Race, Class, and Social Standing though Painting with Artist Kyle Hackett is an episode from I Like Your Work by Erika b Hess.

How long is this episode?

This episode is 47:11 long.

When was this episode published?

This episode was published on Apr 3, 2026.

Can I save Exploring Race, Class, and Social Standing though Painting with Artist Kyle Hackett for later?

Yes. Use the heart button on the episode page to add it to your favorite episodes list.

Are there related episodes from I Like Your Work?

Yes. This page shows related episodes from I Like Your Work when more episodes are available from the podcast feed.

Quick Answers About This Episode

Where can I listen to Exploring Race, Class, and Social Standing though Painting with Artist Kyle Hackett?

You can listen to Exploring Race, Class, and Social Standing though Painting with Artist Kyle Hackett on this page when the episode audio is available from the podcast feed.

Which podcast is this episode from?

Exploring Race, Class, and Social Standing though Painting with Artist Kyle Hackett is from I Like Your Work by Erika b Hess.

What are the episode details?

Published Apr 3, 2026 and 47:11 long