Titus Kaphar: On Contemporary Art and the #BlackLivesMatter Movement

Article: "On Contemporary Art and the #BlackLivesMatter Movement"

(Huffington Post)

"While visiting Titus Kaphar's exhibition Asphalt and Chalk at Jack Shainman Galleryin Chelsea, New York in early February, I was struck by the power, simplicity and deceptive ordinariness of two small panels, a diptych, near the entrance. On one panel a raised clenched fist, realistically rendered, has been all but obliterated by what appear to be rapidly applied expressionist strokes of white paint; on the other an open palm has been given a similar whiteout treatment.

Both hands are black, and written in white paint at the bottom-right of the respective panels are the numbers "68" and "14." This piece, painted last year, is cryptically titled1968/2014. The exhibition features other larger paintings, such as Another Fight For Remembrance (2014), showing crowded scenes of black figures with hands raised and open against a dark night sky, their faces partially visible, obscured by the riot of glowing white paint. In all, these works give the impression of a struggle between an inchoate yet assertive whiteness bent on erasing the thoughtfully rendered, gesturing black bodies.

Although these paintings rehearse the painterly tactics we have come to associate with Kaphar's pictorial archaeology of Euro-American art history and racial experience, they speak more directly to recent events in the United States, specifically the fatal shooting by police of the unarmed black youth from Ferguson, Missouri, Michael Brown, on August 9, 2014. To be sure, Brown's death at the hands of the police marks only one of several such incidents that occur with alarming frequency; but it touched an already raw nerve and set off mass demonstrations -- and, unfortunately, the occasional riot -- such as the streets of America have not seen since the Los Angeles Riots of 1992, following the acquittal of policemen caught on tape beating another black man, Rodney King."   more at Huffington Post

Titus Kaphar Finding Moses 2006 Taylor Collection Denver

Torey Thornton: Armory Show Artists You Should Already Be Collecting

Article:  11 Armory Show Artists You Should Already Be Collecting

(Artsy)

"Although Brooklyn-based, Torey has been embraced by the L.A. scene. Now, New York collectors are catching on, as well. A Cooper Union Graduate of 2012, he had his first solo show with OHWOW last fall and curated a summer show at Suzanne Geiss. His loose, playful imagery manifests in paintings and sculptures with freshness that tiptoes between child’s play and surrealism. You can catch a moment of woodgrain or a familiar form yet the paintings remain in a state of metamorphosis. There is something else about the work, which really draws me to it: a genuine optimism that holds the viewers gaze fills it with an effortless sense of joy."   more at Artsy

Torey Thornton

Karmooz Aram: ‘Geometries of Difference’

Article: 'Geometries of Difference' on display at SUNY New Paltz's Samuel Dorsky Museum

(DailyFreeman.com)

"The exhibition features works by seven contemporary artists who play with modernist abstraction and push geometry and pattern to the verge of ornament. “Geometries of Difference” includes works by Derrick Adams, Kamrooz Aram, Rana Begum, Jeffrey Gibson, Jason Middlebrook, Kanishka Raja and Seher Shah. They subtly subvert modernist abstraction through strategies of difference, pushing geometry and pattern to the verge of ornament. Drawing from and referring to Western abstraction and other aesthetic traditions more accepting of ornament, the artworks in the exhibition present a dialogue between the two visual discourses, revealing unexpected juxtapositions and intersections that challenge traditional art histories.

Exhibition highlights include two new 7-foot high paintings by Aram, a large wall installation by Begum, and two new series of prints and collages by Shah that investigate pattern and architecture, never before exhibited in the United States."  more at Daily Freeman

Kamrooz Aram Phosphorus Visions (2007)   www.theartaffair.com  #TaylorCollectionDenver

Kehinde Wiley: A New Republic

Article: A New Republic at Brooklyn Museum of Art. Feb 20 - May 24, 2015

(mutualart.com)

"The works presented in Kehinde Wiley: A New Republic raise questions about race, gender, and the politics of representation by portraying contemporary African American men and women using the conventions of traditional European portraiture. The exhibition includes an overview of the artist’s prolific fourteen-year career and features sixty paintings and sculptures.

Wiley's signature portraits of everyday men and women riff on specific paintings by Old Masters, replacing the European aristocrats depicted in those paintings with contemporary black subjects, drawing attention to the absence of African Americans from historical and cultural narratives.

The subjects in Wiley's paintings often wear sneakers, hoodies, and baseball caps, gear associated with hip-hop culture, and are set against contrasting ornate decorative backgrounds that evoke earlier eras and a range of cultures.

Through the process of "street casting," Wiley invites individuals, often strangers he encounters on the street, to sit for portraits. In this collaborative process, the model chooses a reproduction of a painting from a book and reenacts the pose of the painting’s figure. By inviting the subjects to select a work of art, Wiley gives them a measure of control over the way they're portrayed.

The exhibition includes a selection of Wiley's World Stage paintings, begun in 2006, in which he takes his street casting process to other countries, widening the scope of his collaboration."   more at Mutual Art

Wiley, Madonna of the Rosary   www.theartaffair.com  #TaylorCollectionDenver