Rashid Johnson

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Rashid Johnson RASHID JOHNSON Born 1977 | Lives and works in New York NY, USA EDUCATION 2005 School of the Art Institute, Chicago IL, USA 2000 Bachelor of Arts | Columbia College, Chicago IL, USA SOLO EXHIBITIONS 2016 Fly Away | Hauser & Wirth, New York NY, USA Rashid Johnson: Within Our Gates | Garage Museum of Contemporary Art, Moscow, Russia Rashid Johnson: Reasons | GAMeC, Bergamo, Italy 2015 Shea Wall | Grand Palais, Paris, France New American Art | Studio des Acacias, Paris, France Anxious Men | The Drawing Center, New York NY, USA Blocks | The High Line, New York NY, USA Smile | Hauser & Wirth, London, England 2014 Islands | David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles CA, USA Magic Numbers | George Economou Collection, Athens, Greece Three Rooms | Kunsthalle Winterthur, Winterthur, Switzerland New Growth | Museum of Contemporary Art, Denver, Denver CO, USA 2013 New Growth | Ballroom Marfa, Marfa TX, USA The gathering | Hauser & Wirth, Zürich, Switzerland Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks | High Museum of Art, Atlanta GA, USA Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks | Kemper Art Museum St. Louis MO, USA Message to Our Folks, Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, Atlanta GA, USA 2012 Coup d‘état’ | Los Angeles LA, USA Rumble | Hauser & Wirth, David Kordansky Gallery, New York NY, USA Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks | Miami Art Museum, Miami FL, USA Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks | Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Chicago IL, USA Shelter | South London Gallery, London, England 2010 Between Nothingness and Eternity | Carlson/Massimo De Carlo, London, England There are Stranger Villages | Galerie Guido W. Baudach, Berlin, Germany 25 Days after October | Massimo De Carlo, Milan, Italy Our Kind of People | Salon 94, New York NY, USA 2009 Other Aspects | David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles CA, USA The Dead Lecturer: Laboratory, Dojo, and Performance Space | Power House Memphis, Memphis TN, USA Smoke and Mirrors | Sculpture Center, Long Island City NY, USA 2008 Sharpening My Oyster Knife | Kunstmuseum Magdeburg, Magdeburg, Germany The Dead Lecturer | Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery, New York NY, USA Cosmic Slops | Richard Gray Gallery, Chicago IL, USA 2007 Dark Matters | James Harris Gallery, Seattle WA, USA 2005 The Production of Escapism | Indianapolis Museum of Contemporary Art, Indianapolis IN, USA 2003 The Rise and Fall of the Proper Negro | Moniquemeloche Gallery, Chicago IL, USA 2002 12×12: New Artist/New Work | Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago IL, USA SELECTED GROUP EXHIBITIONS 2016 The Inaugural Exhibition | MAKASIINI CONTEMPORARY, Turku, Finland For Freedoms | Jack Shainman Gallery, New York NY, USA Blackness in Abstraction | Pace Gallery, New York NY, USA Woven | 60 Wall Gallery, New York NY, USA Route to (Re)Settlement | Palmetto Curatorial Exchange at Mann-Simons, Columbia SC, USA [email protected] | +358 50 3259 444 | www.makasiinicontemporary.com 2015 Salon d’Hiver | Hauser & Wirth, Zurich, Switzerland Opening the Box: Unpacking Minimalism | The George Economou Collection, Athens, Greece Breath/Breadth: Contemporary American Black Male Identity | Maier Museum of Art at Randolph College, Lynchburg VA, USA Storylines: Contemporary Art at the Guggenheim | Guggenheim, New York NY, USA America is Hard to See | The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York NY, USA The Freedom Principle: Experiments in Art and Music, 1965 to Now | MCA Chicago, Chicago IL, USA Reality of My Surroundings: The Contemporary Collection | Nasher Museum of Art, Duke University, Durham NC, USA Relationships and Representations: Perspectives on Social Justice Work | Mildred Kemper Art Museum, Washington University, St. Louis MO, USA 2014 Black in the Abstract, Part 2: Hard Edges/Soft Curves | Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, Houston TX, USA Black Eye | 57 Walker Street, New York NY, USA Impulse, Reason, Sense, Conflict. Abstract Art from the Ella Fontanals-Cisneros Collection | Cisneros Fontanals Art Foundation (CIFO), Miami FL, USA 30 Americans | Contemporary Arts Center New Orleans, New Orleans LA, USA From the Collection: Looking at process | De La Cruz Collection, Miami FL, USA INVISIBLE-EXPORTS, The Botanica (presented by AA Bronson & Michael Facets) | Knoxville Museum of Art, Knoxville TN, USA Variations: Conversations In and Around Abstract Painting | LACMA Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles CA, USA Look at me: Portraiture from Manet to the Present | Leila Heller Gallery, New York NY, USA Secret Passions. Private Flemish Collections | Lille 3000, Euralille, France CoDM Ceremonies of Dark Men | Lincoln Theatre, Washington DC, USA Body Doubles | Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Chicago IL, USA Forever Now: Painting in the New Millennium | The Museum of Modern Art, New York NY, USA The Forever Now: Contemporary Painting in an Atemporal World | The Museum of Modern Art, New York NY, USA George Nakashima: In Conversation | Untitled, New York NY, USA Music Palace. The power of music seen by visual artists | Villa Empain, Brussels, Belgium Other Ways; Other Times: Influences of African-American Traditions from St. Louis Collections | Philip Slein Gallery, St. Louis MO, USA Look At Me Now! | Monique Meloche, Chicago IL, USA Man in the Mirror | Vanhaerents Art Collection, Brussels, Belgium Impulse, Reason, Sense, Conflict: Abstract Art from the Ella Fontanals-Cisneros Collection | CIFO Art Space, Miami FL, USA 2013 White Collar Crimes | Acquavella Galleries, New York NY, USA Angel of History | Beaux-arts de Paris: L‘école nationale supérieure, Paris, France Island | Dairy Art Centre, London, England Painting in Place | LAND Los Angeles Nomadic Division, Los Angeles CA, USA Darkness Visible | National Art Museum of China, Beijing, China RUN | Merci-Mercy, New York NY, USA 2012 Re-activation | Shanghai Biennale, Shanghai, China 30 Americans, The Rubell Family Collection | Chrysler Museum of Art, Virginia Beach, VA, USA (Travelling Exhibition) An architect’s dream | Curator’s Office, Washington DC, USA Heute. Malerei | Kunstmuseum Magdeburg, Magdeburg, Germany CARA DOMANI | MAMbo Museo d’Arte Moderna, Bologna, Italy In the Holocene | MIT List Visual Arts Center, Cambridge MA, USA 2011 54th Venice Biennale, Venice, Italy you, your sun and shadow | Anderson Gallery at Virginia Commonwealth University School of Arts, Virginia VA, USA Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington DC, USA (Travelling Exhibition) Livingroom Exotica | Kunsthaus Glarus, Glarus, Switzerland Dwelling | Marianne Boesky Gallery, New York NY, USA Seeing Is a Kind of Thinking: A Jim Nutt Companion | Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Chicago IL, USA Becoming: Photographs from the Wedge Collection | The Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, Durham NC, USA 30 Americans, The Rubell Family Collection | The North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh NC, USA INTERNAL / EXTERNAL AFFAIRS | Residence of the Ambassador of the United States of America to Germany, Berlin, Germany [email protected] | +358 50 3259 444 | www.makasiinicontemporary.com American Exuberance | Rubell Family Collection, Miami FL, USA Secret Societies. To Know, To Dare, To Will, To Keep Silence | Schirn Kunsthalle Frankfurt, Frankfurt, Germany; CAPC de Bordeaux, Bordeaux, France Converging Voices, Transforming Dialogue | University Museum, Texas Southern University, Houston TX, USA With one color… | Van de Weghe Fine Art, New York NY, USA 2010 Light Breaks Where No Sun Shines | Bortolami Gallery, New York NY, USA Re-dressing | Bortolami Gallery, New York NY, USA At Home/Not at Home: Works from the Collection of Martin and Rebecca Eisenberg | Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College, Annandale-on-Hudson NY, USA About Us | Johann König, Berlin, Germany Lush Life | Lehmann Maupin, New York NY, USA Item | Mitchell-Innes & Nash, New York NY, USA From Then to Now: Masterworks of African American Art | MOCA, Cleveland OH, USA Selected Works from the MCA Collection: Focus on UBS 12×12 | Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago IL, USA Contemporary Magic: A Tarot Deck Art Project | National Arts Club, New York NY, USA (LEAN) | Nicole Klagsbrun Gallery, New York NY, USA Hope! A contemporary art exhibition | Palais des Arts et du Festival, Dinard, France David Adamo, Heather Cook, Brendan Fowler, Rashid Johnson, Phil Wagner | UNTITLED, New York NY, USA 2009 Across the Divide: Reconsidering the Other | Illinois State Museum, Chicago IL, USA Dress Codes: Clothing as Metaphor | Katonah Museum of Art, Katonah, NY, USA Under Control | Krannert Art Museum, Champaign IL, USA Beg, Borrow and Steal | Rubell Family Collection, Miami FL, USA 30 Seconds off an Inch | Studio Museum Harlem, New York NY, USA 2008 Made in Chicago: Photographs from the Bank of American LaSale Collection | Chicago Cultural Center, Chicago IL, USA Summer Mixtape Volume 1: the Get Smart edition | Exit Art, New York NY, USA Across the Divide: Reconsidering the Other | Illinois State Museum Springfield IL, USA 30 Americans, The Rubell Family Collection | Miami FL, USA Ah, Decadence | School of the Art Institute, Chicago IL, USA Zero Zone | Tracey Williams, Ltd., New York NY, USA 2007 For the Love of the Game: Race and Sports | The Amistad Center for Art & Culture at the Wadsworth Athenaeum Museum of Art, Hartford CT, USA Color Line, Luanda Triennial in Angola | Jack Shainman Gallery, New York NY, USA MCA Exposed: Defining Moments in Photography, 1967-2007 | Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago IL, USA 2006 American Identities, Brooklyn Museum of Art, New York NY, USA A noir, E blanc, I rouge, U vert, O bleu: colors | Kunstmuseum Magdeburg, Magdeburg,
Recommended publications
  • Download Rashid Johnson Résumé
    177 NW 23rd Street, Miami, Florida 33127 (786) 332-4736 Rashid Johnson Born in Chicago IL, 1977 EDUCATION Bachelor of Arts, Columbia College, Chicago IL, 2000 School of the Art Institute, Chicago, Chicago IL, 2004 – 2005 Lives and works in New York NY SELECTED SOLO EXHIBITIONS 1999 Seen In The Dark, G.R. N’Namdi Chicago, Illinois 2000 Seen In The Dark G.R. N’Namdi, Detroit, Michigan 2000 National Black Fine Art Show, G.R. N’Namdi, New York, New York 2001 Manumission Paper, G.R. N’Namdi Chicago, Illinois 2001 Manumission Paper, G.R. N’Namdi, Detroit, Michigan 2013 Ballroom Marfa, ‘New Growth’, Texas TX High Museum of Art, Atlanta ‘Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks’, Atlanta GA Kemper Art Museum, ‘Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks’, St. Louis MO 2012 David Kordansky Gallery, ‘Coup d’état’, Los Angeles LA Miami Art Museum, ‘Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks’, Miami FL South London Gallery, ‘Shelter’, London, England Hauser & Wirth, ‘Rumble’, New York NY Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, ‘Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks’, Chicago IL 2010 Massimo De Carlo, ‘25 Days after October’, Milan, Italy Carlson/Massimo De Carlo, ‘Between Nothingness and Eternity’, London, England Galerie Guido W. Baudach, ‘There are Stranger Villages’, Berlin, Germany Salon 94, ‘Our Kind of People’, New York NY 2009 David Kordansky Gallery, ‘Other Aspects’, Los Angeles CA Sculpture Center, ‘Smoke and Mirrors’, Long Island City NY Power House Memphis, ‘The Dead Lecturer: Laboratory, Dojo, and Performance Space’, Memphis TN 2008 Richard Gray Gallery, ‘Cosmic
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  • Rashid Johnson: Anxious Men October 2–December 20, 2015
    Rashid Johnson: Anxious Men October 2–December 20, 2015 Drawing Room Opening Reception: Thursday, October 1, 6–8pm For further information and images, please contact Molly Gross, Communications Director, The Drawing Center 212 219 2166 x119 | [email protected] August 5, 2015 New York – The Drawing Center will present Rashid Johnson: Anxious Men, a site-specific installation created by Johnson for the Drawing Room gallery. Universally accessible and employing common visual tropes such as the monochrome and the grid, Johnson’s work is also self- referential, making specific allusion to his upbringing in Chicago in the late seventies and eighties and the Afro-centric values of his parents. The core of the exhibition is a new series of black-soap- and-wax-on-tile portraits that Johnson calls his “anxious men.” Executed by digging into a waxy surface, they enact a kind of drawing through erasure and represent the first time Johnson has worked figuratively outside of photography or film, and on such a small scale. Whereas Johnson’s Rashid Johnson, Untitled previous work has taken a more cerebral approach to questions of race and political identity, the Anxious Men, 2015. White ceramic tile, black soap, drawn portraits confront the viewer with a visceral immediacy. wax, 47 1/2 x 34 1/2 x 2 inches. © Rashid Johnson, Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth. Photo by The portraits will be set within a multi-sensory environment that includes wallpaper depicting a Martin Parsekian. photograph of the artist’s father from the year Johnson was born, and an audio sound track comprised of Melvin Van Peebles’s “Love, That’s America,” a song originally featured in Peebles’s 1970 film Watermelon Man and that was recently pressed into service by the Occupy Wall Street movement.
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  • Galleries & Museums
    24 CHICAGO READER | DECEMBER 2,2005 | SECTION T WO Galleries & Museums installation; work by Elvia Rodriguez- Skestos Gabriele 212 N. Peoria. Beverly Ochoa, through Sat 12/24. E Opens Fri Fishman, screen prints on vinyl, through 12/2, 6-10 PM. Sat noon-5. 773-344-1940 Sat 12/31. Tue-Fri 11-6, Sat noon-5. 312-243- 1112 Portals 742 N. Wells. Jorge Simes, paint- ings and works on paper, through Wed 3/1. South Side Community Art Center 3831 Tue-Fri 10-5, Sat 11-5. 312-642-1066 S. Michigan. Elizabeth Catlett, prints, through Sat 12/3 C . Wed noon-5, Sat 9-5, Practical Angle 161 E. Erie. Work by Vlado Sun 1-5. 773-373-1026 Ketch and Stuart Brent, through Fri 12/16. Mon-Fri 10-6, Sat 10-5. 312-280-8118 Steelelife 4655 S. King, 2nd fl. Max Sansing, paintings, through Sat 12/10. Tue- Printworks 311 W. Superior #105. “The Art Sat 1-8. 773-538-4773 of the Bookplate,” work by 72 artists, through Sat 2/4. E Opens Fri 12/2, 5-8 PM. Stutz Studiowerks 5303 N. Clark. Deanna Tue-Sat 11-5. 312-664-9407 Andrews, photos, through Mon 12/12. Wed, Fri & Sun 11-5, Thu 1-7. 773-907-8889 Byron Roche 750 N. Franklin. Rebecca Shore, Paul Hunter, Jiwon Son, paintings, 33 Collective 1029 W. 35th, 3rd fl. “Post through Sat 12/31. Tue-Sat 11-6. 312-654- Abstraction Figuration,” work by members 0144 of the Midwest Paint Group; Marivi Ortiz, photos, through Thu 12/22.
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  • Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks September 20, 2013 – January 6, 2014
    Educator’s Guide Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks September 20, 2013 – January 6, 2014 ABOUT THIS GUIDE This guide is designed as a multidisciplinary companion for K-12 educators bringing their students to view Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks, IN THIS GUIDE on view at the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum from September 20, Before You Visit | p.2 2013, through January 6, 2014. Our intent is to offer a range of learning In the Gallery | p.3 objectives, gallery discussions, and postvisit suggestions to stimulate the Collection Connections | p.6 learning process, encourage dialogue, and help make meaning of the art In the Classroom or at Home | p.7 presented. Teachers at all grade levels should glean from this guide what is Vocabulary | p.8 most relevant and useful to their students. Vocabulary words that appear in Additional Resources | p.9 bold are defined at the end of the guide. The Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum would like to thank the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago for the development of the content from which this guide has been adapted. All quotes from Rashid Johnson are from the exhibition catalog Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks by Julie Rodrigues Widholm (Chicago: Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, 2012) unless otherwise noted. ABOUT THE EXHIBITION Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks is the first major solo museum exhibition to survey the career of this Chicago- born, New York-based artist. Using photography, painting, sculpture, and video, Johnson challenges entrenched ways of thinking about the black experience in America and, by extension, seminal issues of race in today’s society.
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  • Storm King Art Center to Stage Live, Site-Responsive Performances of Rashid Johnson’S the Hikers, in Collaboration with Choreographer Claudia Schreier
    STORM KING ART CENTER TO STAGE LIVE, SITE-RESPONSIVE PERFORMANCES OF RASHID JOHNSON’S THE HIKERS, IN COLLABORATION WITH CHOREOGRAPHER CLAUDIA SCHREIER Adapted from Johnson’s 2019 ballet and film of the same name, The Hikers is presented in conjunction with the artist’s site-specific sculptural installation at Storm King, The Crisis THE HIKERS Five performances at select times from August 20–21, 2021 RASHID JOHNSON & CLAUDIA SCHREIER IN CONVERSATION August 20, 2021 at 6PM THE CRISIS On view until November 8, 2021 From left to right: (1) Rashid Johnson, The Hikers (2019). Film shoot documentation. Courtesy of the artist. Photo: Van Wampler. (2) Rashid Johnson, The Crisis (2019). Courtesy of the artist and Hauser & Wirth. Photo: Stephanie Powell courtesy of Storm King Art Center. New Windsor, NY, July 22, 2021—Storm King Art Center will stage five site-responsive performances of Rashid Johnson’s ballet, The Hikers, from August 20 to 21, 2021. Adapted from the film and corresponding performances of the same title, The Hikers follows the journey of two solo hikers, both Black: first alone, then crossing each other’s path—an encounter that unfolds in sometimes lithe, sometimes lumbering balletic movements, challenging modern conceptions of blackness and fetishizations of black bodies in motion. In collaboration with choreographer Claudia Schreier, Johnson explores the physical and psychological repercussions that attend the black body in space. Originally debuted at the Aspen Art Museum in 2019, The Hikers has subsequently been performed at Hauser & Wirth in New York, with presentations of the film at Aspen Art Museum, Museo Tamayo in Mexico City, and Hauser & Wirth.
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  • Once Overlooked, Black Abstract Painters Are Finally Given Their
    ARTS AND LETTERS Once Overlooked, Black Abstract Painters Are Finally Given Their Due In the 1960s, abstract painting was a controversial style for Black artists, overshadowed by social realist works. Now, it’s claimed its place as a vital form of expression. By Megan O’Grady Feb. 12, 2021 IN 1998, THE ARTIST Jack Whitten, then 58, jotted down 32 objectives, a manifesto of sorts, which included the following: Learn to understand existence as being political. Avoid art-world strategies. Erase all known isms. Don’t succumb to populist aesthetics. Remove the notion of me. Eliminate that which qualifies as a narrative. Learn to live by the philosophy of jazz. Only fools want to be famous (avoid at all cost). Remain true to myself. Published posthumously in his 2018 book, “Jack Whitten: Notes From the Woodshed” — a collection of studio logs, essays and poetry spanning 50 years — the list points to some of the tensions, formal and psychic, that shaped his art (for jazz musicians, to “go to the woodshed” means to work in solitude, trying out ideas and testing instincts before taking them public). Growing up in Jim Crow Alabama, Whitten was barred from the public library but, by 1960, he was in New York, studying art at Cooper Union. The Abstract Expressionist Norman Lewis (a Black American) befriended and mentored him; so did Willem de Kooning (a white European). Art allowed Whitten to bridge the country’s racial divides with a practice that embodied the possibility of individual freedom and improvisation within larger social identities. His insistence that painting was about something ran counter to — or expanded upon — the Minimalist ideals of the time, which privileged form over meaning (“Erase all known isms”).
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  • Rashid Johnson
    Rashid Johnson Born in Chicago IL, 1977 Bachelor of Arts, Columbia College, Chicago IL, 2000 School of the Art Institute, Chicago, Chicago IL, 2004 - 2005 Lives and works in New York NY Selected Solo Exhibitions 2017 Hauser & Wirth, 'Stranger', Somerset, England Milwaukee Art Museum, 'Rashid Johnson. Hail We Now Sing Joy', Milwaukee WI The Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, 'Rashid Johnson. Hail We Now Sing Joy', Kansas City MO McNay Art Museum, 'Rashid Johnson. The New Black Yoga and Samuel in Space', San Antonio TX 2016 Hauser & Wirth, 'Rashid Johnson. Fly Away', New York NY Garage Museum of Contemporary Art, 'Rashid Johnson. Within Our Gates', Moscow, Russia GAMeC, 'Rashid Johnson. Reasons', Bergamo, Italy 2015 Grand Palais, 'Shea Wall', Paris, France Studio des Acacias, 'New American Art', Paris, France The Drawing Center, 'Anxious Men', New York NY The High Line, 'Blocks', New York NY Hauser & Wirth, 'Smile', London, England 2014 David Kordansky Gallery, 'Islands', Los Angeles CA George Economou Collection, 'Magic Numbers', Athens, Greece Kunsthalle Winterthur, 'Three Rooms', Winterthur, Switzerland Museum of Contemporary Art, Denver, 'New Growth', Denver CO 2013 Ballroom Marfa, 'New Growth', Marfa TX Hauser & Wirth, 'The gathering', Zurich, Switzerland High Museum of Art, Atlanta 'Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks', Atlanta GA Kemper Art Museum, 'Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks', St. Louis Page 1 of 7 MO Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, 'Message to Our Folks', Atlanta GA 2012 David Kordansky Gallery, 'Coup d'état', Los Angeles LA Hauser & Wirth, 'Rumble', New York NY Miami Art Museum, 'Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks', Miami FL Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, 'Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks', Chicago IL South London Gallery, 'Shelter', London, England 2010 Carlson/Massimo De Carlo, 'Between Nothingness and Eternity', London, England Galerie Guido W.
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  • Look at Me Now! Rashayla Marie Brown, Hassan Hajjaj, Rashid Johnson, Ebony G
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Look At Me Now! Rashayla Marie Brown, Hassan Hajjaj, Rashid Johnson, Ebony G. Patterson, Amy Sherald, William Villalongo on the wall Nina Chanel Abney porcelain projects William Villalongo, Water Root June 13 – August 23, 2015 Reception: Saturday, June 13, 4-7pm Artist talk: 4-5pm Moderated by Grace Deveney, MCA Chicago Susman Curatorial Fellow Curated by Allison Glenn CHICAGO – Monique Meloche Gallery is pleased to present, Look At Me Now!, a group exhibition of artists working internationally, who are presenting various perspectives on the history of portraiture through the construction of a new gaze. Throughout the exhibition, subtle hints of allegory give way to overt pop-culture references. It is through this lens that Rashayla Marie Brown, Hassan Hajjaj, Rashid Johnson, Ebony G. Patterson, Amy Sherald, William Villalongo, and Nina Chanel Abney produce, creating imagery that references, disarms, and reframes the canon of portraiture. Rashid Johnson’s Self-Portrait as the black Jimmy Connors in the finals of the New Negro Escapist Social and Athletic Club Summer Tennis Tournament was created for the artist’s 2008 solo exhibition at moniquemeloche. The New Negro Escapist Social and Athletic Club is a fictional African American secret society, a parallel universe which embodies Johnson’s desire to upend the conventions of history and the idea of a legacy. Inspired by the construction and performance of identity, Amy Sherald paints portraits of strangers whose characteristics immediately resonate with her. Similarly influenced by the performance of identity, Rashayla Marie Brown works to reveal the projection of cultural myths and desires on the collective consciousness, often using her body as a source and subject.
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  • Rashid Johnson
    RASHID JOHNSON born 1977, Chicago IL lives and works in New York, NY EDUCATION 2004 MFA, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL 2000 BA, Columbia College, Chicago, IL SELECTED SOLO / TWO PERSON EXHIBITIONS (* indicates a publication) 2021 Black and Blue, David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles, CA The Crisis, Storm King Art Center, New Windsor, NY Summer Projects: Rashid Johnson, Creative Time, New York, NY The Bruising: For Jules, The Bird, Jack and Leni, Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AR Capsule, National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa, Canada 2020 Waves, Hauser & Wirth, London, England Stage, PS1 COURTYARD: an experiment in creative ecologies, MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY 2019 The Hikers, Museo Tamayo, Mexico City, Mexico The Hikers, Aspen Art Museum, Aspen, CO It Never Entered My Mind, Hauser & Wirth, St. Moritz, Switzerland Anxious Audience, Fleck Clerestory Commissioning Project, curated by Lauren Barnes, The Power Plant, Toronto, Canada The Hikers, Hauser & Wirth, New York, NY 2018 *No More Water, Lismore Castle Arts, Lismore, Ireland *The Rainbow Sign, David Kordansky Gallery, Los Angeles, CA Provocations: Rashid Johnson, Institute for Contemporary Art, Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond, VA 2017 Anxious Audience, organized by Annin Arts, Billboard 8171, London Bridge, England [email protected] www.davidkordanskygallery.com T: 323.935.3030 F: 323.935.3031 Stranger, Hauser & Wirth Somerset, Bruton, England Rashid Johnson: The New Black Yoga and Samuel in Space, McNay Art Museum,
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  • Cheryl Pope Just Yell June 22Nd - August 3Rd
    FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Monique Meloche is pleased to announce that Cheryl Pope is now represented by the gallery and will present her first solo exhibition at moniquemeloche Just Yell opening Saturday, June 22nd from 4-7pm. Cheryl Pope Just Yell June 22nd - August 3rd Reception for the artist Saturday, June 22, 4-7pm moniquemeloche, 2154 W Division, Chicago, IL 60622 In 1880, a student at Princeton University stood before the crowd and began to yell -- the crowd answered and thus began the Yellers (later to become cheerleaders). Just Yell, the title of Cheryl Pope's first solo exhibition in Chicago at moniquemeloche uses the framework of American High School: yellers (cheerleaders), yearbooks, Varsity patches, and car culture to contain reactions to the current gun violence that is plaguing our city and our nation. Through a collaboration with over 400 teens city-wide from Farragut Career Academy, Lindblom Math and Science Academy, William Taft Academic Center, Walter Payton College Prep, Alfred Nobel Elementary, and Phoenix Military Academy, Pope does not seek to offer solutions but rather to make the invisible visible in a less temporal space and format than the morning news. These yells ask each of us to confront a reality that is both present and absent simultaneously. On opening night Saturday, June 22nd, Phoenix Military Academy will perform along with a selection of young poets performing their spoken word to viewers as they ride in classic muscle cars, through Wicker Park and Humboldt Park, in a piece titled Drive by in 5 Acts. A series of public events will continue each Saturday during the run of the exhibition starting with the Teen Creative Agency (TCA) from the Museum of Contemporary Art, who will be installing their "Living Room" program at the gallery on Saturday, June 29th; additional events to be announced.
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  • Collector's Issue
    / Fall • Winter Winter • Fall 2005–06 The Studio Museum in Harlem Magazine / Fall • Winter 2005–06 COLLECTOR’S ISSUE From the Director SMH Board of Trustees wide variety of media. However, It is with great pride that I also Raymond J. McGuire I do believe that Frequency is a congratulate artist Julie Mehretu Chairman snapshot of the current moment on her being awarded a Carol Sutton Lewis Vice-Chair we live in, and just as Freestyle MacArthur “genius” grant this Reginald Van Lee ushered in a new generation of past September. Julie has a Treasurer artists, I believe we are about to long, rich history with the Studio Gayle Perkins Atkins become acquainted with some Museum as an Artist-in-Resi- Kathryn C. Chenault of the most exciting new voices dence (2000-2001) and as a Paula R. Collins in contemporary art. part of 2001’s Freestyle. I am Gordon J. Davis thrilled that the MacArthur Foun- Anne B. Ehrenkranz dation recognized the talents of Susan Fales-Hill an important artist such as Julie Dr. Henry Louis Gates, Jr. Sandra Grymes Mehretu. Joyce Haupt Arthur J. Humphrey,Jr. George L. Knox When it comes to art, never say Nancy L. Lane never. After the tremendous Dr. Michael L. Lomax success of Freestyle in 2001, I I want to thank all of the support- Tracy Maitland had both privately and publicly ers of the Frequency exhibition Rodney M. Miller acknowledged that there might for their unwavering support and Eileen Harris Norton no longer be a need for me to their considerable generosity: Corine Pettey organize group shows featuring The Andy Warhol Foundation David A.
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  • Barkley L. Hendricks on “The Fucked-Up-Ness of American Culture” by Lee Ann Norman on April 7, 2016
    A Masterful Portrait Painter, Barkley L. Hendricks Produced an Early Series of Basketball Paintings Grounded in Abstraction KS by VICTORIA L. VALENTINE on Mar 6, 2020 • 12:58 pm “Father, Son, and…” (1969) by Barkley L. Hendricks ONE OF THE BIG DRAWS at the Jack Shainman booth at Frieze Los Angeles last month was a triptych by Barkley L. Hendricks (1945-2017) called “Father, Son, and…” Given the title and the artist’s renown for making masterful portraits that convey his subject’s cool style and mien, it would be safe to assume the 1969 painting was figurative. In fact, the figure is absent from the work, which portrays a sport to which many in the African American community are devoted, and some might even say worship: basketball. Before he developed a practice focused on portraiture, Hendricks made a series of basketball paintings grounded in abstraction. He was still in school at the time, working as an arts and crafts teacher at the Philadelphia Department of Recreation, between his years at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts (1963-67) and Yale University, where he earned both his BFA and MFA degrees in 1972. Offering the work for sale at the Los Angeles art fair was a precursor to a more fulsome presentation planned at the New York gallery in May. About a dozen paintings made between 1967 and 1970 will be on view Jack Shainman, most shown publicly for the first time, along with related ephemera and documentary . photographs by Hendricks. The gallery provided a description of the exhibition.
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