Post-black #1: Rashid Johnson at the High Museum, Atlanta

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Whatever I might think of Atlanta’s High Museum of Art’s for-profit status and high ticket prices and its dumbed-down (numbed-down) blockbusters (curatorial snoozefests of the treasures of the Old World), it has continued to represent African American and folk artists well over the years, and the recent show of Rashid Johnson, Message to our Folks, was no exception. Message to Our Folks, whose title comes from 70’s-era, African-American literature, consists of photography and mixed-media sculptural installations that combines a personal interpretation of a retro-funk aesthetic with contemporarily styled artistic interventions and references to African American culture.

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By looking backward at these earlier conceptions of blackness, Johnson positions himself clearer in a later, distanced position that takes blackness as its subject matter. Johnson’s work is deliberately generational, couched in terms of his parent’s blackness versus his own. This distinctly personal voice thus refrains from defining, even while thematizing, blackness and factors in the artist’s own subjectivity.

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I was reading the exhibition catalog, and in it, contemporary African American artist Glenn Ligon characterized this work by Johnson as “post-black.” This term, which caught currency after Thelma Golden of the Whitney Museum used it in a 2001 show, describes an African American artist does not categorize or define his or her work as being about race, even though it is very much still a theme. The way Ligon wrote about it struck me off, since he puts his own work in the “black” category, and it puts Johnson in the “post-black” category. It’s the generational element repeated: implying the Johnson is more free in how he can deal with such topics.

Yet I think its hard to get away from the fact that, unlike, say post-modernism which came after Modernism, post-black implies a condition after being black, but what would that be exactly? What then does that original term “black” mean? I saw a couple shows in Chelsea this Fall that also speak to the notions of “black” and “post-black,” and I want to write about those next.

 

Pistoletto’s “Lavoro” at Luhring Augustine

Perhaps photographing Michelangelo Pistoletto’s work ought to be considered an art in its own right. In  photos of Pistoletto’s show Lavoro, at Luhring Augustine Gallery through April 28, it is difficult to tell what is part of the artist’s original composition, silkscreened onto mirror, and what is a reflection.

At least that’s the case with my photos. The gallery website provides you with the works sans reflection. But maybe my photos show better what it is like to view the exhibition, and particularly the immersive quality with which Pistoletto draws the viewer and the temporal setting into play with the realistic scenes he creates. The ladies in the background above, and myself below, deserve such a prominent place when looking at and talking about the artist’s work. Pistoletto begins to create them, but the works are complete when placed in a room and viewed by a person. 

Lavoro is Italian for work. The bright colors, hyperrealistic treatment of surfaces, and prosaic tools depicted here relate to the industrial kind of work done in warehouses and on construction sites. 

Pistoletto began painting on mirror as early as the 1960s. (I wrote about Pistoletto’s early work and original mirror paintings here after visiting the Philadelphia Museum of Art retrospective in 2010.) His cropped compositions and bold color are different here, looking much more like photographs and much less like the delicate portraits on tissue he used to paint. They look like their respective times in that way.

I especially like the sign here, telling the viewer: “Public forbidden to enter.”
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Mirror, Mirror, Everywhere: Jonah Freeman and Justin Lowe

Mirrors were everywhere at the art fairs (Yes, I realize this is a belated post. Life is crazy. For regular posting to begin soon, offer me an awesome full-time marketing job, please.)

This installation by Jonah Freeman and Justin Lowe at Marlborough Chelsea’s booth at the Armory was my favorite of all the mirrors though, for the textured surfaces of the mirrors created by a layered printing process. They appeared rather like abstract, naturalistic watercolors despite the medium.

I also appreciated the setting; the artists also designed the wallpaper behind the mirrors, which feature a fractal-like pattern. The duo notably also created a whole environment for Bright White Underground in 2010 (great photos of this on The Selby).