But we wanted to get from Chelsea to Harlem and back and save every second we could.
Plus–and here’s the point that weighed most heavily–there were four of us to split the fare, or, to put it another way, there were four of us to pay the subway fares, or to put it still another way, there were four of us to divide the cab’s pollution quotient.
The Studio Museum in Harlem once again put on a great show, “Frequency.” This large group exhibit of 35 black emerging artists from New York to Los Angeles, was co-curated by Thelma Golden and Christine Y. Kim. Goldin, SMH’s director and chief curator, and Kim, SMH’s associate curator, once again showed what savvy observers they are of what’s happening in the art world and what’s good.
I’m going to put up a few of my favorites in the show and Roberta will put up some of hers and my guess is we’ll overlap a bit. I also want to add that we were too tired to engage with the hour’s worth of videos by time we’d gone through the rest of the show, so they may have been good, even great, but I can’t say one way or the other.
There was a lot in this show about the roles of fabric and clothes. So those are the pieces I’m going to stick to.
In photography, the iconic “Nike” by Hank Willis Thomas, the brand symbol branded on a shaved head against a white photo backdrop recalls the s&m and exploitation vibe of Robert Mapplethorpe, especially his black subjects, even as it brings up issues of slavery, ownership, scarification and the sorry commercialism of sports. That white backdrop also brings up Ralph Lauren and fashion. What a photo! His piece, “Liberation of T.O.: Ain’t no way I’m go’n in back ta’work fa’massa in dat darn field,” shows footballer Terrell Owens scattering people and wares in his wake as he escapes, football in hand, down a city street. Although I think the guy is a nut case, I do think he felt the corporate unity of Eagles management was like working for the massa, and this photo captures that feeling perfectly (image, “Branded Head”).
The other hot photographer was Demetrius Oliver, whose tongue isn’t always planted as firmly in his cheek as his picture of curly black hair emerging from an ear suggests. “Tracks” drawn on a the back of a fisted hand stayed open even as it suggested underground railroad, and classroom tracking and drug tracks and anger. Both of these photos reminded me of body photographer John Coplans, the detail of the body parts so resolved as to become something more.
Oops, I’m straying from my subject. Here’s a list of other stuff I liked that weren’t really about fabric or clothes: Philadelphia artist Jina Valentine’s takes on the evanescence of culture and lives; Roberto Visani’s dark sculptural takes on African American poverty and lifestyle; Paula Wilson’s use of video in the middle of a painting; Mark Andre Robinson’s mixture of power and delicacy and suggestion in charcoal on paper (shown); Jefferson Pinder’s “Invisible Man” and, with Jeff Stein, “Carwash Meditations” videos; Leslie Hewitt’s memory photocollages, “riffs on real time;” Michael Paul Britto’s poster for his video “Dirrrty Harriet Tubman”; and Nyame O. Brown’s delicate drawings on monsterhood and its powers to engender fear (image, Mark Andre Robinson, untitled from “Crusade Fragments” series).