My Labor Is My Protest. For this exhibition, Gates has created a multi-faceted installation that investigates themes of race and history through sculpture, installation, performance and two-dimensional works exhibited both inside and outside of the Bermondsey site. For the Inside the White Cube: Mitchell Squire, William E. Jones and Isabelle Cornaro.
White Cube is pleased to present its first exhibition with Theaster Gates. Gates is an artist, curator and urban activist whose work aims to galvanise communities and act as a catalyst for social change. For this exhibition, Gates has created a multi-faceted installation that investigates themes of race and history through sculpture, installation, performance and two-dimensional works exhibited both inside and outside of the Bermondsey site. The exhibition furthers the artist's interest in a critique of social practice, shared economies and the question of objects in relation to political and cultural thought.
In Raising Goliath (2012) and My Labor is My Protest (2012), Gates readdresses the ongoing struggle for civil rights and, like his ongoing series, ‘In the Event of Race Riot’ (2011 onwards), these works have special iconic significance in relation to particular episodes in recent American history. In Raising Goliath, Gates uses theatrical pulleys to suspend a classic red fire-truck from the ceiling of South Gallery II, counterbalancing it at its other end is a huge metal container, housing hundreds of issues of the iconic magazine Ebony. Gates described the work as a way to ‘hoist the history of the Civil Rights out of view, making it both weightless and invisible...’ and to highlight ‘the way things change and remain the same’. In My Labor is My Protest, he has parked a yellow fire truck at the entrance to the Bermondsey gallery and partially covered it with tar, a gesture that is both political and personal, inspired, in part, by Gates's father who tarred roofs for a living as an alternative form of protest during the Chicago riots (1968).
Gates refers to his working method as ‘critique through collaboration’ and his projects often stretch the form of what we usually understand visual art to take. His focus is also on availability of information and the cross-fertilisation of ideas. In South Gallery I, a library has been installed, borrowed from the archive of Johnson Publishing Company, the Chicago-based publishers of Ebony. The curated selection of books and magazines offer a history of black American culture. Alongside this, in 9x9x9, an installation of vanity stands and make-up counters display a selection of cosmetics from Fashion Fair, the first and largest company to produce products specifically for a black consumer and also a subsidiary of Johnson Publishing Company. Visitors will be able to book a makeover from Fashion Fair make-up artists during the opening and the first two weekends of the exhibition.
Gates will also display various two-dimensional works in the exhibition that explore his interest in the poetics of re-purposed and salvaged materials. These include a series of tar panels that incorporate various textural objects such as wood, carpet and wire and several 'Civil Tapestry' works, made from colourful strips of decommissioned fire hose tonally arranged and sewn together.
During the course of the exhibition, there will be two performances by The Black Monks of Mississippi. This is an ensemble of musicians and vocalists that Gates writes for, performs in and directs and whose music includes such diverse traditions as Gospel, Blues, Buddhist and Zen chants. Gates’ performances with the The Black Monks of Mississippi are highly animated since for the artist, sound works in conjunction with the movement of the body.
Theaster Gates was born in 1973. He lives and works in Chicago. He has had solo exhibitions at Seattle Art Museum (2011), Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art (2011), Milwaukee Art Museum (2010), Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2009) and Art Institute of Chicago (2007). His work has been shown in group exhibitions at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston (2010) and the Tokoname Museum of Ceramic History, Japan (2005). He also featured in ‘dOCUMENTA 13’, Kassel, Germany (2012), the ‘Armory Show’, New York (2011) and ‘Whitney Biennial’, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2010). One of his most esteemed projects is ‘The Dorchester Project’ (2006), which is ongoing.
A fully illustrated catalogue, with texts by Bill Brown, Fred Moten and Jacqueline Terrassa, will be published to accompany the exhibition.
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On Black Foundations
Theaster Gates
THURSDAY: 06 - 16 September 2012, 6pm
South Gallery I, Bermondsey
'On Black Foundations' is an interactive installation comprised of vanity stands and make-up counters which display a selection of cosmetics from Fashion Fair, the first and largest company to produce products specifically for a black consumer and also a subsidiary of Johnson Publishing Company.
Visitors will be able to book a makeover from Fashion Fair make-up artists at the opening preview and during the first two weekends of the exhibition.
Book your free Fashion Fair makeover at the preview on 6 September, 6-8 pm and on 8/9 and 15/16 September 2012, 2-6 pm.
Each appointment includes consultation with a trained Fashion Fair make up artist.
Please contact makeover@whitecube.com to make a booking.
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Inside the White Cube
Mitchell Squire
North Galleries
7 September - 11 November 2012
Mitchell Squire's practice is founded on an exploration of how artefacts are projections of the body and how material culture can become a lens through which to view society and history. Squire’s work typically consists of a few strategically appropriated components that are loaded with socio-political associations and personal narratives to underline specific historic events.
William E. Jones
North Galleries
7 September - 11 November 2012
William E. Jones will exhibit a series of prints depicting idealised allegorical male figures that he found on 19th and 20th century stock certificates. Used to represent the monetary value of the stocks and shares, the original illustrations have been blown up to human scale to increase their significance. Two films questioning the strategies of control implemented by agencies, such as the CIA, will also be on display.
Isabelle Cornaro
North Galleries
7 September - 11 November 2012
Through film, sculpture, drawing and painting, French artist Isabelle Cornaro re-evaluates objects by exploring the tensions between their aesthetic and cultural value and by questioning meaning through formal and conceptual modes of display. Cornaro uses scanning, photography and plaster casting as her methods of production.
Preview: Thursday 6 September 2012, 6-8pm
White Cube Bermondsey
South Galleries and 9 x 9 x 9, Bermondsey Street - London
Opening times
Tuesday – Saturday
10am – 6pm
Sunday
12pm – 6pm