This exhibition is comprised of Whitfield Lovell's most recent series of tableaux constructed from charcoal drawings on vintage wood combined with found objects. In creating his tableaux, Lovell draws upon a personal archive of hundreds of studio photographs of anonymous African-Americans, most dating from the early years of the twentieth century.
'Embers'
This exhibition is comprised of Whitfield Lovell's most recent series of
tableaux constructed from charcoal drawings on vintage
wood combined with found objects. In creating his tableaux, Lovell draws
upon a personal archive of hundreds of studio
photographs of anonymous African-Americans, most dating from the early years
of the twentieth century. It is by looking
through these tintypes, cabinet cards, bubble-glass portraits, and postcards
that Lovell begins the process of developing the
idea for each individual work. Once an image has captured the artist's
attention, it is drawn freehand in charcoal on old wood.
Careful thought is given to the grain and texture of the wood as well as to
any remnants of color from paint or wallpaper. Found
objects are then added in an intuitive process that varies from piece to
piece to create three dimensional tableaux which
literally thrust these unknown people from the past into the viewer's space.
The free-standing tableaux developed out of a series of installations that
Lovell has created over the past decade. Lovell's first
installations, in a 19th century slave- trader's mansion in Italy, in an
abandoned 1930s row house in Houston, Texas, and in the
former barracks of a 16th century Spanish fort in Havana, Cuba, recognized
and utilized the ambiance of the existing historical
spaces. Lovell began by making marks on the walls and progressively worked
his way out into three-dimensional, theatrical
space.
Whispers From the Walls, Lovell's forth installation was created during a
residency at the University of North Texas Art Gallery
in Denton during the spring of 1999. The installation conveys a haunting
sense of the past with an intimate environment
evoking the rich African-American history and culture of the early years of
the 20th century. The exhibition has received
extensive critical acclaim and has toured nationally since its inception,
appearing at venues including the Seattle Art Museum
and New York's Studio Museum in Harlem. Future venues include the
Contemporary Art Center in Virginia Beach, Virginia, the
Montgomery Museum of Fine Arts in Alabama, the California African-American
Museum in Los Angeles, and the Oklahoma City
Art Museum.
Lovell's most recent installation Visitation: The Richmond Project
originated at the Hand Workshop in Richmond, Virginia in the
fall of 2001, and is on view at the University of Wyoming in Laramie from
March 16 through June 8, 2002, and at the Columbus
Museum Uptown in Georgia from September 5 to October 12. Lovell's work has
also been seen in recent solo exhibitions at the
Neuberger Museum in Purchase, New York, the Boston University Art Gallery,
and the Black History Museum & Cultural Center
in Richmond, Virginia, and will be on view at the Kohler Arts Center in
Wisconsin from June 30 to September 29, 2002
Embers is accompanied by a catalogue with an essay by Dominque Nahas.
Image: Whitfield Lovell, Glory, Mixed Media
Hours: Tues.-Sat., 10am-5:30pm
DC Moore Gallery
724 Fifth Avenue NY 10019 New York
tel : (212) 247-2111
Fax: (212) 247-2119