I am influenced by working class people, their stories, workplaces, homes, and bodies; specifically those living in mobile homes. Tangentially I’m curious about my queer female body at work, as another building material, a symbol of invisible labor, stemming from a haunting feeling of a history and class that I can’t escape. My work is situated in sculpture, site-specificity, queer-identity and social practice. For the past 5 years I’ve documented mobile home parks (over 25 sites) and interviewed residents; compiled research on the mobile home industry and culture; and created and exhibited work influenced by these rudimentary archives I’ve built and my personal history growing up in a double-wide trailer in eastern Pennsylvania. I’m continuing to visit mobile home parks throughout the east coast and rust belt, systematically archiving with overarching research questions around the American Dream, specifically the myth of social mobility and the stigma and shame around places we call home.
Amy Ritter_SCAFFOLD_Xerox photographic images_2019_ Largest figure is 14 FT tall & smallest figure is 5 Ft 5 IN tall_ Porch Gallery in Upstate NY_ This project was part of a solo exhibition I had in upstate NY called FAÇADE | SCAFFOLD. I created a human scaffolding using the body as building material to talk about class hierarchy and social mobility.