NEW YORK, NY.- SEVEN., a group exhibition by We Buy Gold, is on view at
Jack Shainman Gallery and Nicola Vassell Gallery in Chelsea, New York through August 11. Curated by Joeonna Bellorado-Samuels, SEVEN. features work by Max Guy, Renee Gladman, David Hammons, Nandi Loaf, Abigail Lucien, Kerry James Marshall, Lorraine OGrady, Ashley Teamer, Charisse Pearlina Weston, and Lynette Yiadom-Boakye. Founded in 2017, We Buy Gold is a roving art space presenting exhibitions, commissioned projects, and public events. Launching with a suite of four exhibitions in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn (ONE., TWO., THREE. and The Yard), and going on to produce ambitious collaborations with contemporary artists and curators such as Moses Sumney (SUNSET.), Nina Chanel Abney (FIVE.), and Diana Nawi (SIX.), We Buy Gold mounts projects that encourage the dissection and deconstruction of systems of power by artists working in a cross-section of creative media.
SEVEN. explores the ways in which artists disrupt the politics of space, time, and language to constitute another world. In their fertile hands, the measure of time lengthens, bodies morph, and the fixed use-value of objects and language slipshighlighting the foundational fractures present within contemporary society. Whether in Max Guys time-warped diptych of The Wiz and The Wizard of Oz, Ashley Teamers splintered interstates of embroidered inkjet prints, or Kerry James Marshalls clattering and colossal pocket change, emerging and established voices harmonize through practices that strive to upend figurative expectations and reveal the obscure structures that dictate significance. Distorting the boundaries of the body, architecture, place, and meaning, each artist investigates the generative capacity and possibilities of the undefined and malleable. How are new worlds constituted in the midst of contemporary crises? By leaning into ruptures that open out into an otherwise.
Renee Gladman is a writer and artist preoccupied with crossings, thresholds, and geographies as they play out at the intersections of poetry, prose, drawing, and architecture. Working primarily on paper, Gladman treats the drawing space as an evolving laboratory for exploring blackness, the nonvisible, structures of habitation, and fictional knowing.
Max Guy is an interdisciplinary artist who works with paper, video, sculpture, artist books, and installation. He activates fast, ergonomic methods to make poetry of the world, creating work that approaches existential themes with material and conceptual levity. Describing his process as an act of tracing lifes contours, Guys experimental practice contemplates the world that surrounds him and how individuals augment themselves to be a part of it.
David Hammons is a conceptual artist whose work is rooted in found objects and assemblagewielding a complex vocabulary of familiar symbols that reveal the charged politics of everyday objects. With a manifold practice spanning drawing, painting, printing, performance, sculpture, and video, Hammons art confronts conflicts of African American identity, community, and urban life. Making work that defies commodification, Hammons remains committed to investigating and establishing what it means to create as an outsider of the art worlds institutional establishment.
Nandi Loaf investigates the existential state of the artist by implicating herselfconstructing the identity Nandi Loaf: the artist. This fetishization of the artist creates a hermetically sealed practice: a hedonistic exploration that Loaf refers to as hyperparticipation. Often blurring the lines between her simulated and physical presence, Loafs works move seamlessly between paintings, prints, acrylic sculptures, and home-built machines to create maximally reduced interventions. In doing so, Loaf makes her subject the social and financial sites of exchange in the art world.
Abigail Lucien is a Haitian-American interdisciplinary artist. Luciens practice addresses themes of (be)longing, futurity, myth, and place by considering our relationship to inherited colonial structures and systems of belief/care. Working across sculpture, literature, and time-based media, Luciens practice is auto-ethnographic: referencing found objects and familiar surroundings as a way to implicate the bodys relationship to material and placeinterpreting concepts such as loss, love, and grief as a fluid procession rather than a state to reach or become.
Kerry James Marshall is an artist whose work interrogates Western art history, challenging and recontextualizing the canon to include themes and depictions that have been historically omitted. His mastery as an artist has radically changed what he calls the lack in the image bank by foregrounding Black subjects in his paintings. Born in Birmingham at the beginning of the American Civil Rights movement, and later moving to the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles just before the 1965 Watts riots, Marshalls work is inspired by his own personal history as well as what he interprets to be recurring elements of the American experience.
Lorraine OGrady is a conceptual artist and cultural critic whose work employs the diptych as its primary form. While she has consistently addressed issues of diaspora, hybridity, and black female subjectivity, OGrady uses the diptychs both/and thinking to frame her themes as symptoms of a larger problematic: that of the divisive and hierarchical either/or categories underpinning Western philosophy. In her work, personal and aesthetic attitudes often considered contradictory, such as anger and joy or classicism and surrealism, are not distinguished and technical means are governed both by chance and obsessive controlsimultaneously expressing political argument and unapologetic beauty.
Ashley Teamers collages explore the relationships between the body, nature, space, and time. She uses painting, sculpture, photography, and sound to creatively intervene with indoor and outdoor architecture revealing the malleability of our built environment. Through layering images, Teamer charts invented landscapes where dialogues between divergent moments and relationships are bridged.
Charisse Pearlina Weston is a conceptual artist and writer whose work emerges from deep material investigations into symbolic and literal curls, layerings, and collapses of space, poetics, and the autobiographical. Her work contends with the dynamic interplay of violence and intimacy through repetition, enfoldment, and concealment.
Lynette Yiadom-Boakye is a painter who creates fictional figures that are untethered to a specific time or place, and are born from various untraceable subjects: people, objects, thoughts, photographs, or images she has drawn, observed, or recalled. When describing her painting and writing, Yiadom-Boakye derives each practice from the language of poetrya fiction imbued with reality and truth. Merging the visual and textual, her titles function as another mark beside the painting that, like her figures, need not describe, explain, or justify.
Shainman Gallery
Jack Shainman Gallery has been dedicated from its inception to championing artists who have achieved mastery of their creative disciplines and are among the most compelling and influential contributors to culture today. For nearly four decades, the Gallery has earned a reputation for introducing international artists to American audiences, and for developing young and mid-career artists, who have gone on to gain worldwide acclaim. The gallery has presented the first New York exhibitions of artists Nick Cave, Hayv Kahraman, Meleko Mokgosi, Richard Mosse, Toyin Ojih Odutola, Hank Willis Thomas, and Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, among many others. Today, Jack Shainman Gallery is celebrated for its multicultural roster of emerging and established artists and estates who engage in the social and cultural issues of their time.
Shainman Gallery
We Buy Gold: SEVEN: A Group Exhibition at Jack Shainman Gallery & Nicola Vassell Gallery
June 29th, 2023 - August 11th, 2023