Electric. Artist works at the intersection of art history and black history. She layers the formal language of modern artabstraction, minimalismover the conceptual and technical strategies of avant-garde jazz. Jones work in audio, sculpture and drawing extends the parallel legacies of experimentation, wit and riff of these radical cultural forms.
Sikkema Jenkins & Co is pleased to present Electric, an exhibition of new works by
Jennie C. Jones, on view from July 8 through August 13, 2010.
Jennie C. Jones works at the intersection of art history and black history. She
layers the formal language of modern artabstraction, minimalismover the conceptual
and technical strategies of avant-garde jazz. Jones work in audio, sculpture and
drawing extends the parallel legacies of experimentation, wit and riff of these
radical cultural forms. The new work brought together in Electric continues the
artist's exploration of cultural confluence, hybridization, and a more complicated
and historically inclusive form of modernism.
In her new audio work Slowly, In a Silent WayCaged Jones digitally slows a section
of Miles Davis' In a Silent Way (using tempo changes and cross-fading) to match the
length of John Cage's pivotal work 4'33". In Jones' edit, the time frame Cage set
aside for silence is filled by Davis' measured hypnotic instrumental score (his
characteristic trumpet is absent from the edited section). The result is a meeting
of two notions of silence.
The installation of this work is carefully integrated with the architecture of the
gallery: it is set for playback on a loop that alternates between the side front
galleries. When its speaker is dead the Cage piece is recreated as the sound of its
listeners, the space itself filling the rest of the void. This is a mediated version
of Cages work: the speaker has replaced the live musicians.
In the main space, Jones presents a new series of collage and ink drawings based on
the packaging of music. The Song Container series focuses on the compact disc box,
transforming the commonplace collateral of listening into a minimalist art form. We
are clearly still in the territory of the formal language of analogue but a new
metaphor emerges in the reference to the emptiness of the digital realm. Jones'
reconfigured containersshells that once held something as ephemeral as soundare
shown with display racks and other objects that evoke the formal language of
minimalism.
In the same space, a series of sculptural drawings made from instrument cable are
plugged directly into the gallery wall. The medium of these worksinstrument cableis
part of the electrical apparatus used in the capture and editing of the music
featured in this exhibition. Miles Davis' performance of In a Silent Way featured a
full-blown electric set-up and is regarded as the first of his fusion recordings.
John Cage was a well-known electronic music pioneer. But by plugging into the
non-conductor surface of the gallery wall these wall works bring us back to the idea
of silence. In the same way, the artist playfully questions the title of the
exhibition.
Jones attended Rutgers University, Mason Gross School of the Arts where she received
her MFA in 1996. Prior to that she attended The School of the Art Institute of
Chicago, receiving a BFA in 1991. Over the past decade she has participated in
numerous prestigious artists residency and fellowship programs, both nationally and
international. In 2008 she was a fellow at the Rockefeller Foundations Bellagio
Study Center as well as a Visiting Artist at The American Academy in Rome, Italy.
Her awards include a Creative Capital grant in 2008, The Rema Hort Mann Foundation
Award, in 2006, and a Pollock-Krasner in 2000. Jones was the 2008 recipient of the
William H. Johnson Prize awarded to one emerging African American artist a year.
Upcoming exhibitions include a major solo shows at The Yerba Buena Center for the
Arts, San Francisco and LAArt, Los Angeles in early 2011.
Opening July 8, 2010
Sikkema Jenkins & Co.
530 West 22nd Street, New York, NY 10011
Hours: mon-fri 10-18
admission free