SEOUL.- Gagosian announced Derrick Adams: The Strip, the artists debut exhibition in Korea. New work by Adams will be presented in the headquarters of Amorepacific, the world-renowned Korean beauty company, in the center of Seoul, opening on September 3, 2024, alongside the third edition of the Frieze Seoul art fair, which is open to the public September 47. The exhibition will be held in the APMA Cabinet, a project space on the ground floor of the David Chipperfielddesigned building.
In this latest body of work, Adams paints a series of display windows at beauty supply stores that he photographs both near his Brooklyn studio and throughout the world. Transforming the compositions through his distinctive use of abstraction, he explores themes of style and beauty. Presenting groups of mannequin heads adorned with colorful wigs, the views of store windows are framed by molded reliefs of brickscollaged, dimensional elements that contrast with the flatness of the paintings. Spray-painted hearts pay tribute to American fashion designer Patrick Kelly, whose exuberant and inclusive styles have long inspired the artist. The paintings are titled after classic tracks from the 1990s by women-fronted R&B groups including Brownstone, Destinys Child, Groove Theory, SWV, Total, and Xscape, whose femme styling and costuming remain influential.
The paintings vary in size and configuration, as does the placement of the depicted windows and groupings of heads and wigs, emulating street encounters with shop displays. Use Your Heart (SWV) (all works 2024) features three heads positioned in frontal and three-quarters views on a single shelf. Below them are the profiles of a hair dryer and product bottles with labels made of collaged fabric, conveying Adamss interest in pattern and the application of readymade materials. In Cant You See (Total) the textured brick and layered multicolor hearts bifurcate the painting into two separate windows, each containing two tiers of mannequin heads. Another divided panel, Luv Bad B**ches (Brownstone) includes on the left four heads in a pyramidal arrangement with a rainbow wig at its apex, juxtaposed with a single head with an elaborate polychrome hairstyle on the right. Framed on three sides by the applied brick relief and painted hearts, the group portrait Who Can I Run To (Xscape) pictures multiple heads with wigs in synthetic colors together with a video monitor, reinforcing the rectilinearity of the works support as well as its commercial imagery. This body of works marks the sophistication of Adamss style, interpreting recognizable subjects into integrated compositions of vivid colors and abstract shapes.
Related to the Style Variation series that Adams initiated in 2019, each mannequin head is defined individually with a faceted geometry of color planes in an echo of Cubism and African masks. The heads relate as well to the history of both portraiture and adornment from ancient Egyptian and other traditions, while the wigs evoke mystique and carnivalesque transformation. Adams draws from the strategies of Pop art, considering commercial display, consumer products, identity, and desire. In addition, his experimental approach to the representation of Black urban life is inspired in part by artist Romare Beardens panoramic collage The Block (1971, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York). Derived from many locales, Adamss subjects are Black women who embody the roles of both consumer and muse. Their engagement with various forms of costuming is cross-culturaloften the prototype for how the transformation of appearance expresses style, attitude, and individualism.
Derrick Adams was born in Baltimore in 1970, and lives and works in New York. Collections include the Baltimore Museum of Art; Birmingham Museum of Art, Alabama; Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, Richmond; Brooklyn Museum, New York; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Exhibitions include ON, Pioneer Works, New York (2016); Network, California African American Museum, Los Angeles (2017); Patrick Kelly, The Journey, Studio Museum in Harlem/Countee Cullen Library, New York (2017); Sanctuary, Museum of Arts and Design, New York (2018); Transmission, Museum of Contemporary Art, Denver (2018); Where Im From, Baltimore City Hall (2019); Buoyant, Hudson River Museum, Yonkers, New York (2020); Derrick Adams and Barbara Earl Thomas: Packaged Black, Henry Art Gallery, Seattle (2021); LOOKS, Cleveland Museum of Art (202122); and I Can Show You Better Than I Can Tell You, FLAG Art Foundation, New York (2023). Adams has received the Louis Comfort Tiffany Award (2009), Joyce Alexander Wein Artist Prize from the Studio Museum in Harlem (2016), Gordon Parks Foundation Fellowship (2018), and Robert Rauschenberg Foundation Residency (2019).