Born in Seattle in 1959, Stockholder grew up in Vancouver, British Columbia. She studied in the 1970s with sculptor Mowry Baden, whose architectural constructions from that period suggest bridges or passageways and other spaces through which the spectator moves. Baden's commitment to physically involve the viewer in articulated arrangements of materials in space had a lasting influence on Stockholder. Originally a painter, she progressed from unstretched canvases to painted reliefs of cloth, wood and other materials before making her first large-scale installation in 1983. She received an MFA from Yale University in 1985 and lived in Brooklyn from 1985 until 1999. She is currently director of graduate studies in sculpture at Yale.Stockholder's works consistently encourage movement around them and entice the spectator to peer behind them. Such curiosity is particularly rewarded by a 1990 sculpture (most studio works are identified only by the year of their creation rather than a title), the front of which is formed by a 5-foot-high rectangular wooden frame resembling stretcher bars with a slanted top. Supported by the frame, a blue panel bears a circular light failure with one red and one white bulb. Concealed by the front of the sculpture, which stands a foot or so away from the wall, is a string of crocheted flowers that dangles from one side of the sculpture's back and is reflected in a square mirror mounted on the wall. Discovery of the mirror and yarn leads the viewer to another delightful surprise between the wall and the geometric face of the sculpture: a large, free-form concave disk made of papier-mache and painted red like a big poppy.