CHICAGO, IL.- Monique Meloche Gallery has now opened Sanford Biggers: Back to the Stars, the artists fourth solo presentation with the gallery. The exhibition showcases new artworks from his ever-evolving Chimera and Codex series, which juxtaposes figurative marble sculptures and quilt compositions. Biggers' practice brings aesthetic, poetic, and social insights to the intertwining stories embedded in material culture. His creative processes recognize and conflate syncretic impulses between aesthetic expressions from seemingly disparate societies and histories, transforming them into rigorously formal and conceptual artworks.
Biggers Chimera sculptures combine various African and European masks, busts, and figures that explore historical depictions of the body and their subsequent myths, narratives, archetypes, perceptions, and power. Back to the Stars features two new cast marble busts adorned and enigmatically veiled with hand-painted elements. Biggers polychromatic intervention disrupts the historically revered iconic white marble canon, questioning the nature of authenticity, authority, and origin just as early 20th-century documentation of African objects were blackwashed or memorialized without their original paint and raffia decoration restored. Intrigued by recent scholarship on the historical whitewashing of classical Greco-Roman sculpture and its convergence with the blackwashing of various African sculptural objects in the early twentieth century, Biggers revitalizes the ancient tradition of polychromy and challenges the associated cultural and aesthetic assumptions connected to the source materials while acknowledging the often inconsistent provenances of these objects.
The marbles are shown alongside a new work in his kaleidoscopic Codex seriesa large-scale quiltwork composed from stitched geometric swatches stretched across a plywood armature to form a three-dimensional object that resembles folded paper. These origami-like quilts map a constellation of references from Japanese woodblock prints to Gees Bend quilts, from Duchamp ready-mades to signposts on the Underground Railroad. Having collected quilts over the course of many years, in this series Biggers aesthetic considerations of palette and pattern illuminate conceptual considerations of syncretism and appropriation.
Back to the Stars rejects fixed narratives of quilt and marble traditions. Instead, Biggers new works gracefully traverse the intricate layers woven into their composition, embracing the balance between the masculine and feminine, resilience and fragility, eternal and ephemeral. Through this nuanced and conceptual patchwork, the artist ushers his practice into the future, revealing the inherent essence of each piece as it harmonizes with the passage of time.
The Newark Museum of Art will debut Sanford Biggers latest outdoor installation, Apollo (Diptych), 2023 this fall. Part of Biggers Chimeras series this artwork features two 3-foot black and white marble sculptures flanking the Museums main entrance at 49 Washington Street. Both sculptures depict a unique interpretation of the Classical Greek god Apollo wearing a large mask derived from African sources. Acquired this year by the Museum, Apollo (Diptych) will be on long-term display. A date for the unveiling will be announced shortly.
Monique Meloche Gallery will also debut a series of new paintings by Nigerian artist Luke Agada for their first solo presentation in Chicago since graduating from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago. Agadas practice examines themes of globalization, migration, and cultural dislocation within the framework of a postcolonial world. These surrealist paintings present warped figures and dream-like compositions as symbols of the fluidness of identity and reference the transformation of the art historical postmodern human figure. Considering how both time and space produce complex bodies of difference, these works address the ambiguity of our identity within post-structuralist theory. Luke Agada: Arms, Feet and Fitful Dreams will be on view in the gallerys viewing room and will run concurrently with Sanford Biggers exhibition.
Sanford Biggers (b. 1970) was raised in Los Angeles and currently lives and works in New York City. Biggers has been honored for his work with awards, fellowships, and public installations. The Newark Museum of Art debuts Biggers latest outdoor installation, Apollo (Diptych), later this yeara new acquisition on long-term display. Part of his Chimeras series, this artwork features two three-foot black-and-white marble sculptures flanking the museums main entrance at 49 Washington Street. In February 2023, he was honored by Morehouse College with the 2023 Bennie Achievement Award. In 2022, he was honored for his achievements by the Art Production Fund, Orange County Museum of Art and Studio Museum in Harlems Lea K. Green Memorial. In 2021, he was the recipient of the 26th Heinz Award for the Arts; Savannah College of Art & Designs deFINE Art Award; and the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Visiting Professor and Scholar in the Department of Architecture at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA. In 2020, he was awarded the Guggenheim Fellowship and appointed Board President at Sculpture Center, Long Island City, NY. Biggers was inducted into the New York Foundation for the Arts Hall of Fame in 2019 and received the American Academy of Arts and Letters Award in 2018. In 2017, he was presented with the Rome Prize in Visual Arts. Biggers was Associate Professor of Visual Arts at Columbia University School of the Arts from 2009-2019.
Monique Meloche Gallery
September 14th, 2023 - October 28th, 2023
'Sanford Biggers: Back to the Stars'