You are here

Jeffrey Gibson

Country:

City:

Categories:

Date: 
Sunday, 25 October 2015 to Sunday, 13 December 2015

MARC STRAUS is proud to present its third one-person exhibition of work by Jeffrey Gibson.

Jeffrey Gibson (b. 1972), who is half Choctaw and half Cherokee, creates sculptures and paintings that intermingle more traditional Native American art with contemporary art and culture. His works are irrefutable evidence that such taxonomies can sit comfortably together, resulting in amalgams of his vast personal interests and unique biography that demonstrate the ease of inclusion.

Assimilating influences such as indigenous art and craft, politics, music, fashion, urban subculture and art history, Gibson coalesces elements from each then re-contextualizes and levels them. Popular music lyrics are suddenly imbued with the gravitas of political statements. His visual language is bold, colorful and vibrant often with geometric arrangements that convey tempo, rhythm, interwoven colors, repetition, variation and silence. The communal spirit is an important aspect here – the works require laborious craft contributed by his studio assistants whom he regards as family.

Almost all the works in the show contain text that are charged with personal meaning, elaborately embroidered in beadwork and testament that design can have content. Gibson appropriates phrases from popular song lyrics, social movements and has recently incorporated his own writings. His use of language thus parallels that of Sister Corita Kent, and like her Gibson has begun to arrange words in scattered and atypical formatting. Sentences are no longer a simple left to right read; they become fragments of a thought floating in one’s mind.

Two new life-sized figures, made with heavily adorned cloaks draped over wooden armatures, are exalted to the role of mythical creatures. Affixed with ceramic heads, the anachronistic beings offer advice to those who are willing to ask the right questions. Are they benevolent, malevolent or just taciturn sentinels?

Embodying the vitality of Native American powwow dancers, the highly adorned punching bags are fully remade but maintain the pugilistic power of its former identity. For Gibson these “bags” personify motley characters: punks, goths, rockers, queers, dancers, fighters. They bear fealty to his heritage, but at the same time obdurately reject associations with any specific culture. They are beautiful, expressive outsiders.

In his new series of beaded wall hangings, Gibson references textiles and blankets traditionally worn as robes, now placards for abstracted graphical aphorisms that connect to immediate social issues. The thoughts behind activist political statements, often obscured by conflicting viewpoints, are revealed and become more personal reveries. In “American History”, Gibson remembers James Baldwin’s famous words through a beaded quilt composition.

His new monochromatic paintings explore a greatly reduced palette. Painted on rawhide, the hard-edge geometric shapes accentuate its materiality; reminding one that it once was a living sentient being. In Document 2015, gray painted monochrome on a full-size deer hide beautifully conflates issues of abstraction with the transience and fragility of life. These sublime works hold reverence for all creatures.

Artist ( Description ): 

Jeffrey Gibson attended The Art Institute of Chicago (BFA) and The Royal College of Art, UK (MA). He was raised in the United States, Germany, and South Korea. Gibson’s artworks are in the permanent collections of many major art museums, including the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, the National Gallery of Canada, the Smithsonian Institute, and the Denver Art Museum. In 2013 he had one-person exhibitions at The ICA Boston, National Academy Museum NYC, and the Rollins Museum. In 2017 he will have a one-person internationally traveling exhibition originating at The Denver Museum of Art. Gibson teaches in the Studio Arts Program at Bard College and is a 2012 TED Foundation Fellow. He is represented by MARC STRAUS (NYC).

Venue ( Address ): 

MARC STRAUS
299 Grand Street
New York, NY 10002

Artweek Press Releases , Newyork & London

Other events from Artweek Press Releases

view
Matt Gondek - The Rise of Deconstructive PopArt
11/04/2017 to 11/05/2017
view
Eternal Idol, Elizabeth Peyton – Camille Claudel
10/13/2017 to 01/07/2018
view
Thomas J Price | Material Visions | Hales Project Room, New York
10/19/2017 to 11/21/2017
view
JOEL MEYEROWITZ: BETWEEN THE DOG AND THE WOLF
09/07/2017 to 10/21/2017

Pages

 

Related Shows This Week

view
Natalia Irina Roman: in∙ner transit | Art installation reimagining the everyday experience of commuting
04/12/2024 to 06/20/2024
view
Systems of Reliance
05/16/2024 to 06/28/2024
view
Chinese multidisciplinary artist Wallace Chan returns to Venice in 2024 with sculpture exhibition, Transcendence | 19 April to 30 September 2024
04/19/2024 to 09/30/2024
view
Featured Artist Exhibition, Bill Lazar, Photographer
04/16/2024 to 06/02/2024
view
,,Urme pe panza vieții”
05/04/2024 to 06/15/2024
view
EMEK Career Retrospective - 30 Years of AAARGHT!
04/27/2024 to 06/08/2024
view
The Mother | The Father
05/16/2024 to 06/16/2024
view
Chester County Studio Tour, Studio 25
05/18/2024 to 05/19/2024

Pages