NEW YORK, NY.- The Museum of Arts and Design presents Jes Fan: No Clearance in Niche, running from March 2 through April 30. This marks the inaugural installation of Fellow Focus, an ongoing exhibition series highlighting the work of alumni of the Van Lier Arts Fellowship at MAD. Funded by the New York Community Trust and introduced to the Museum by its Education Department in 2016, the fellowship provides talented, culturally underrepresented rising artists with financial support and a dedicated studio at MAD for full-time use over four months.
Giving our fellows the chance to conceive, design, install, and open an exhibition at the conclusion of their residency allows them to publicly test out new ideas in a supportive, education-focused atmosphere, said curator Danny Orendorff, MADs Manager of Public and Community Engagement Programs. This is a natural extension of the Van Lier Fellowships objective.
Fans objects and drawings explore transgender identity, body modification, and self-determination. Critical of stereotypes and hierarchies, Fans paradoxical creations greet viewers as riddles, inspiring complex meditations on the conventions and inventions of gender. On view are a number of the artists playful, poetic works, such as T4T (2016), a limp pink silicone dumbbell, and Testo-soap (2016) and Testo-candle (2016), testosterone-infused objects. The exhibition also presents new drawings done on gum rubber and a photography series, Soft Goods, which shows a performer slipping into and falling out of a pair of prosthetic silicone slippers of Fans creation.
The material sensibility of the work speaks to plasticity and malleability, which I use as an allegory about the fluidity of identity categories, Fan said. No Clearance in Niche comes from a warning sign in the New York subway system that marks tunnels that dont meet the MTAs current clearance standards. Migrating between binary genders, my body is constantly seeking clearance in passingand not passingthe two options offered.
Presented in the Museums sixth-floor Project Space, an area designated for spotlighting emerging artists and designers, all Fellow Focus exhibitions will showcase work produced by Van Lier Fellows while in residence at MAD. The installations will be accompanied by artist talks and workshops.
A Brooklyn-based artist born in Canada and raised in Hong Kong, Jes Fan holds a BFA in Glass from Rhode Island School of Design. Fans transdisciplinary practice is based on a material inquiry into otherness as it relates to identity politics. Fan is the recipient of various fellowships and residencies, such as the Van Lier Fellowship at the Museum of Arts and Design; the Pioneer Works visual arts residency; the CGCA Fellowship at Wheaton Arts; and the John A. Chironna Memorial Scholarship at RISD. Fan has exhibited in the United States and internationally; selected exhibitions include Whereabouts at GlazenHuis Museum, Lommel, Belgium; Material Location at Agnes Varis Gallery, New York; Ot(her) at Brown Universitys Sarah Doyle Gallery, Providence, Rhode Island; and Remembering Something That Doesnt Have a Name at Chrysler Museum of Art, Norfolk, Virginia.