Katharina Kaminski: Rituals of Femininity
You grew up in Uruguay, a place far from Paris, your current center of life. What does home mean to you?
Home, to me, is a place where I can rest in my own energy—a place to be nurtured. It’s a space for creation and pure authenticity, a refuge from the chaos of the world. It’s a place to dream, sometimes to be alone, and sometimes to share with friends and family.
My family’s house in Uruguay, where I spend every New Year's Eve, is a very special place. It’s calm, humble, and simple. I come back here as often as I can because I long to reconnect with nature and its simplicity and calmness. I hope to carry that sense of tranquility with me wherever I go. I’ve spent a lot of time in the city over the past few years, and I hope that in the future I can balance my life with more time connected to the earth, the sea, the sun, and the stars. Soon I will be back in Paris, where is my home now, so I have the best of both worlds.
Your first exhibition was called ‘Womb’—a warm place where you feel safe. Do you have a place that gives you a similar feeling?
I’m very interested in the womb as the physical space of gestation. I find this organ, which has the ability to give birth to another human being, miraculous. In holistic disciplines, the womb is also considered an energetic center, tied not just to reproduction but to all kinds of creation. As human beings, we create constantly—we create experiences, relationships, and art.
I named my exhibition Womb because I wasn’t born with one. For a long time, I unconsciously associated myself with a sense of lacking—lacking this creative power, this fertility. The exhibition title, Womb, refers to the installation I created there with 10 clay sculptures lit with fire. It was presented as a kind of ceremony or ritual, connected to an inner journey I undertook to reconnect with my “womb.” Although I don’t have a physical womb, I allowed myself to reclaim my sense of fertility. I embraced abundance and possibility rather than empowering feelings of lack and fear.
Did working through your feelings in art help?
It’s an ongoing process, of course. One art show can’t dissolve a lifetime of patterns in thinking and living just like that, but I believe in the power of ritualization. Our ancestors often connected through ceremonies, engaging as communities for different purposes and in reverence to the Whole. Unfortunately, with the rise of capitalism and technology, we’ve been disconnecting from these rituals more and more. I believe they’re important, and I like to incorporate them both into my creative practice and into the small moments of life.
Ritualizing means bringing presence and intention into our actions. With presence and intention comes manifestation, appreciation, gratitude, and togetherness.
To what extent does femininity play a role in your art?
I think of my art as almost like a diary entry for a specific moment in my life. Sculptural language can embody so many subtleties and unconscious aspects of the psyche that emerge through the process of creation. So, in answering this question, I reflect on my own relationship with femininity.
Although I identify as a woman, sometimes I feel I’m not fully a woman because my chromosomes are XY, and I don’t have reproductive organs. And I’m fine with that because my idea of gender isn’t binary, as we were taught. There’s a whole spectrum of possibilities, and I think that’s beautiful.
Some people may carry more feminine or more masculine energy, but ultimately, we all embody both.
What characterizes this energy?
Masculine energy is characterized by doing and achieving, driven by logic and reason. Feminine energy is more intuitive, focused on receiving and allowing, and characterized by being. I believe a good balance between the two helps create a harmonious, fulfilling life.
Talking about harmony. When does something become art in your eyes?
Art to me is like an energetic current that strives to take form, sound or another dimension to be perceived my human senses. For me, art is creation made with soul. Creation that contains soul—profound honesty, authenticity, and passion. It’s a search to express what can’t be conveyed with words alone.
Do you remember your first encounter with art?
I feel like my first encounter with art was observing the world and being enchanted by it. It was playing with my imagination and, instead of conforming to social norms, always going beyond those constructed limitations. It was about embodying a different kind of energy that felt more genuine and expansive to me.
When did you work with clay for the first time?
My first time was as a child in school. I reconnected with it during the pandemic, and Clay and I have developed a close relationship since then.
How much of yourself can we find in your work?
Sometimes I fear you can find too much of me in my work. It can provoke anxiety in the ego. But as an artist, I embrace this challenge and interpret it as a good sign—it means I’m doing the real work. I’m interested in learning about myself and the human experience through my practice, and I believe this is also what allows others to connect deeply with my art.
What would you love to work on that’s completely outside your usual field?
I have an ongoing relationship with photography and painting. I also enjoy writing. Maybe someday I’ll dedicate more energy to these other creative pursuits. I find it fulfilling to have creative outlets that are pure play. Maybe it’s a stage before they become something more serious, or maybe they bring playfulness to the “serious” work, which isn’t meant to be serious. I also love music, cinema, and architecture, as well as psychology, spirituality, and yoga. I wonder how many of these will I be able to bring together or how many I’ll be able to deepen in this life.
What’s the best way to spend a free afternoon?
Swimming and making out in the sea.
The little things. Have you always looked at life this way?
I have always been very sensitive. And I always felt connected to something beyond. You can call it God, Universe, Nature, or anyway you like. I just felt always mesmerized by the world and being alive in it. The little things are miraculous to me. We tend to take all for granted, because we are used to seeing trees, and having hands and feeling emotions. But if you are really present and you take a wider perspective, you can perceive life as if for the first time and you can sense and honor the complexity of the planet we live in, floating in the Universe, the complexity of our bodies… it’s all just amazing. And there is nothing more meaningful to me than keep living my life with such curiosity and reverence.