Lisa Bufano


Lisa Bufano was an American interdisciplinary performance artist whose work incorporated elements of doll-making, fabric work, animation, and dance.

Early life

Born to Louis A. Bufano and Elizabeth "Betty" Bufano in 1972 in Bridgeport, Connecticut, Bufano graduated from Tufts University in 2003, and later from the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston in 2003. A competitive gymnast as a child, she became a bilateral below-the-knee and total finger-thumb amputee due to a life-threatening staphylococcus bacterial infection at the age of 21.

Career

After losing her lower legs and most of her fingers and thumbs, Bufano began her performance and dancing career when a professor at the University of Linz doing research on the lives of amputees discovered her web page and offered her a stipend to perform in Vienna. She toured from 2006 to 2010 with the AXIS Dance Company, performing works variously choreographed by Victoria Marks, Joe Goode, and Kate Weare to audiences in Austria, Croatia, Slovenia, and Canada, and performed to a packed house at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in a program honoring fellow amputee and dancer Homer Avila as well as at the Baryshnikov Arts Center and Judson Memorial Church, among other venues.
Her dance work typically incorporated a variety of prosthetics and props, but also included segments where her unadorned body was the focus of the performance. According to Bufano she manipulated her body as a way to explore alternative locomotion, corporeal difference, her sexual identity, and animation/manipulation, interests which led to many fruitful collaborations.
Bufano listed among her influences medical drawings, historical wax models and dolls, and optical toys; flip dolls and paper dolls; the structural aspects of Japanese jointed dolls, Hans Bellmer's doll work, Louise Bourgeois' cell installations, and the animation of Jan Švankmajer and the Brothers Quay. One of her main projects was a white muslin dress which turned into a squid, for which she sewed thousands of detailed suckers. "She loved sewing sculptures made of fabric," her brother remarked in a remembrance. "She had a thing for the creepy-cute, the exotic, the bizarre. Things that were dark but also beautiful."
She explained her aesthetic and political goals when she claimed that:
She likewise explained during her time at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston:
She has had an artist residency at the Contemporary Artists Center, North Adams; and also at the 8th Street Air Program, Boise, Idaho. She was a Franklin Furnace Fund recipient in 2006–2007.
Originally based in Boston, Massachusetts, and relocated to San Francisco, California in December 2011.

Death and legacy

Lisa Bufano died by suicide on October 3, 2013, in San Francisco, California; no suicide note was found. Two months later, her brother reflected on the inexplicable nature of her death.
More than a year after her death, her work, along with that by Cara Levine, Shari Paladino and Sadie Wilcox, was included in Four Choreographies at the Worth Ryder Art Gallery in Berkeley, California. A further retrospective was held Storefront Lab in San Francisco in 2015.