LONG ISLAND CITY, NY.- This fall, MoMA PS1 presents a major exhibition of artist Ralph Lemon (b. 1952, Cincinnati), featuring more than sixty artworks made over the last decade across disciplines, and a program of six collaborative performances. Ceremonies Out of the Air: Ralph Lemon comprises dance, large-scale video installation, drawings, photographs, sculpture, and paintings throughout the Museums expansive third-floor galleries, alongside a synchronous monthly program of live works in a dedicated performance space. One of the most significant figures to emerge from New Yorks downtown scene in the 1980s, Lemon engages deeply with the legacies of postmodern dance in the US and the capacity for storytelling through movement reflecting on the state of performance in the museum, on stage, in celebration, and in daily life. Together, Lemons works position the body as an archive of raw emotion, physical labor, and received histories to challenge the ways we have been taught to see the world.
Ceremonies Out of the Air highlights Lemons sustained collaborations across disciplines, materials, and time. The centerpiece of the exhibition is Rant redux (2020 24), a major four-channel video and sound installation realized with Kevin Beasley and based on the live performance Rant (2019ongoing).
Composed of layered movement, sound, and video, this energetic tour de force is enacted by some of the most influential artists working in performance today including Beasley, Okwui Okpokwasili, Samita Sinha, Darrell Jones, and Lemon himself. Lemon describes Rant redux, planned and produced in New York City immediately prior to the COVID-19 lockdown, as an exploded documentary of a very loud
Brown/Black body cultural experiment in rage, freedom, and/or ecstasy. Another highlight of the exhibition is the first comprehensive presentation of his foundational 1856 Cessna Road (200224), a cycle of videos, photographs, and artifacts made in close partnership with Walter Carter and his family. A former sharecropperwho lived through Jim Crow in the Cotton Belt town of Little Yazoo, MississippiCarter developed a series of task-based para-performances in response to Lemons choreographic instructions, which slowly transformed into a speculative science fiction opus on the afterlife of historical violence, the intimacy of artistic collaboration, and biography as social history.
Bringing into focus works that resist broad classification, Ceremonies Out of the Air illustrates Lemons characteristic style of deflection, or what he calls fugitivity. His anarchic, movement-based works obliterate formalist conventions, skewer straightforward tellings of history, and consider how time and place materialize in muscle memory. Recording daily events from diasporic Black life and culture, Lemons works on paper conflate these narratives with renderings of recognizable artworks and fantastical imagery, as well as vibrant color. His video works riff on cult figures like artist Bruce Nauman and writer James Baldwin. Across media, these works shed new light on Lemons connected interests in the mundane and the infinite, in dedication and spiritual release.
Ralph Lemon is a choreographer, writer, and visual artist based in Brooklyn and Philadelphia. His work has been the subject of exhibitions at The Kitchen (2007/2015), Contemporary Art Center, New Orleans (2008), Studio Museum in Harlem (2012) and the Walker Art Center (2006, 2014, 2024). At MoMA, he performed in the Museums Donald B. and Catherine C. Marron Atrium for On Line: Drawing Through the Twentieth Century (2010); he organized the performance series Some sweet day (2012); and he led the discursive project Value Talks as an Annenberg Fellow (201314). MoMA published the first monograph on his oeuvre, Ralph Lemon (2016) in the Modern Dance series. Lemon is a recipient of three Bessie Awards (1986, 2005, 2016), two Foundation for Contemporary Art Awards (1986, 2012), a 2009 Guggenheim Fellowship and Doris Duke Performing Artist Award (2012). In 2015, he received a National Medal of Arts from President Barack Obama. He is a 2018 recipient of the Heinz Family Foundation Award and a 2020 John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Fellowship. Lemon won the Bucksbaum Award for his contribution to the 2022 Whitney Biennial. His works are in the permanent collections of institutions including the Walker Art Center, the Studio Museum in Harlem, and the Whitney Museum of American Art.