SEPTEMBER 8 — DECEMBER 9,
2018
Jeffrey Gibson’s
multidisciplinary practice encompasses a wide range of mediums and draws on a
variety of influences and visual languages to comment on race, sexuality,
religion, and gender, among other topical issues. Combining popular and queer
culture with references to Native American history and current events, Gibson
reflects on his Choctaw and Cherokee heritage as a means of exploring the
significance, traditions, and rituals of personal adornment and identity.
This Is the Day features a
series of embellished garments and helmets created for the exhibition that
probe the layers of meaning and potential power presented through the ritual of
dress. Also debuting is the video I Was Here, an original time-based work
commissioned by the Wellin Museum that investigates the intersections between
community and individuality, gender and identity, and notions of performance
and ritual. These new pieces are presented alongside a large selection of works
created between 2014 and 2018, demonstrating the depth and breadth of Gibson’s
oeuvre. Often combining beadwork, fringe, and jingles associated with Native
American powwow rituals with lyrics from hit songs from the 1980s and
1990s—such as “dearly beloved” and “hold me now”—Gibson blends a multitude of
materials and references in an eclectic and celebratory mash-up.
Although his mediums and
inspirations are diverse, Gibson notes that all his work originates with
painting. The layering of color and glazes, the crisp low-relief lines defining
geometric shapes, the synergy between form and internal color relationships—all
work together to create a kind of legend for understanding Gibson’s work as a
whole. Emanating from his painting practice are the impressionistic ceramics
that reference prehistoric Mississippian head pots; the embellished punching
bags, robes, tapestries, figures, and panels that riff on powwow attire; the
weavings with their tensile fringe and layered color effects that nod to the
tradition of non-objective painting; the garments and helmets that escalate the
notion of adornment; and the video I Was Here, which brings documentary and
magical realism together in an expansion of the artist’s work in the medium.
Combining disparate influences and sensibilities, Gibson invites us to share in
the hope and possibility that the differences that define us can also unite us.
Jeffrey Gibson (b. Colorado
Springs, 1972) grew up in major urban centers across the United States,
Germany, Korea, and England. He received a BFA from the School of the Art
Institute of Chicago in 1995, and an MA in painting from the Royal College of
Art in London in 1998. His work has been featured in solo museum exhibitions at
the National Academy Museum (2013), the Oklahoma Contemporary Arts Center
(2017), and the Denver Art Museum (2018). Recent group shows include
Prospect.3: Notes for Now in New Orleans (2015), Greater New York at MoMA PS1 (2016),
and Desert X in Palm Springs (2017). Gibson is the recipient of the Joan
Mitchell Foundation Painters and Sculptors Grant and the Creative Capital
Foundation Grant. He is an artist-in-residence at Bard College and lives and
works in Germantown, New York.
This exhibition was
organized by the Ruth and Elmer Wellin Museum of Art and will travel to the
Blanton Museum of Art at The University of Texas at Austin, where it will be on
view July 14 – September 29, 2019.
The Ruth and Elmer Wellin
Museum of Art’s programs are made possible, in part, with funds from the Daniel
W. Dietrich ’64 Arts Museum Programming Fund; the Johnson-Pote Museum Director
Fund; the John B. Root ’44 Exhibition Fund; the Edward W. and Grace C. Root
Endowment Fund; the William G. Roehrick ’34 Lecture Fund; and private
contributions.
https://www.hamilton.edu/wellin/exhibitions/detail/jeffrey-gibson-1-1-1
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