The Memory is in the Materials

Mark Bradford in conversation with Christopher Bedford of the Wexner Center and Betti-Sue Hertz of YBCA

It’s both entertaining and eye opening to listen to Mark Bradford talk about his life and work.  At a small gathering at the home of a San Francisco collector, Mark Bradford talked about this experience as an artist, what shapes his thinking, and  how he works. Having grown up in South Central LA, the son of a hair salon owner, at nearly seven feet tall, this MacArthur Genius Award winning artist, is in so many ways, not what society tells us to expect.  To experience his work is to understand his voice.

Mark Bradford, Mithra, 2008 (Image: huffingtonpost.com)

The memory is in the material“, Bradford said specifically referencing his monumental work, Mithra, 2008, often referred to as The Ark, on view now at Yerba Buena Center for the Arts.  Made from found and rotting plywood covered with layers of posters, fliers and other remnants of destroyed businesses left in the Lower Ninth Ward in the wake of Hurricane Katrina, Bradford’s monumental work has a moving and powerful presence.  I highly recommend a visit.  You can learn more about Mithra and its origins here at Prospect 1.

Mark Bradford, discussing his painting Scorched Earth at the Wexner Center press preview, Scorched Earth: Collection of Dennis and Debra Scholl, (image: museumpublicity.com)

“My art practice goes back to my childhood, but it’s not an art background.  It’s a making background.  I’ve always been a creator.  My mother was a creator; my grandmother was a creator”. – (Art 21 Politics, Process & Postmodernism.  Interview with Mark Bradford).  Bradford completed his BFA and MFA at California Institute of the Arts, one of the most conceptual art schools in the country.  I asked him about his experience as a student there, and he responded this way… “I just wanted to get out and make something“.

Mark Bradford, Strawberry, 2002 (Image: Sikkema Jenkins)

And across the street  at SFMOMA is Bradford’s first major museum survey – a thought provoking installation of paintings, sculpture, and multi-media work. One of the most compelling for me was the multi-media installation, Pinocchio Is on Fire – as I sat in the room, walls collaged with darkly colored and rhythmically patterned paper, and the soulful voice of Nancy Wilson singing “Telling the Truth”, I felt as if I was at once in Mark Bradford’s brain and inside his painting.  I began to understand Mark Bradford’s truth.

No photos, sorry…you have experience it in person.

Bradford talks about it here: “Pinocchio Is on Fire is a mythological character that I created to talk about black culture in South LA at a time of flux and fluidity in the late 1980s when it was changing from an older narrative of family toward a “Boyz in the Hood” hip hop moment. And now the ground is shaking again, hip hop is receding and immigration has changed the landscape. The work is a sound piece using my voice and music. It came very naturally to me.”

 

At Artsource, we always talk about how contemporary artists show us a different way of looking at ourselves. Bradford’s unique voice communicates a complex and deeply layered view of our shared culture. This is a show not to miss.

Learn more about Mark Bradford at Pinnochioisonfire.org

JBK

 

To Do List: December

For our December To Do List, we have something for everyone.  Are you looking to give the gift of art?  Both the Creativity Explored Holiday Art Sale and the SF Camerawork Benefit Auction are great opportunities.  If you need to escape the holiday bustle, take in the artist talk at Haines Gallery or see the More American Photographs show at the CCA Wattis Institute.  Finally, if you have out of town guests, make sure to stop at SFMOMA to dazzle them with Jim Campbell’s site specific piece Exploded Views.  Enjoy!

 

December 2-22nd – Holiday Art Sale at Creativity Explored, 3245 16th Street: Creativity Explored is a nonprofit visual arts center where over 130 artists with developmental disabilities create, exhibit and sell art. For the sale the studio will be filled with original prints, paintings, drawings, ceramics, sculptures and textiles, as well as seasonal items like note-cards and artist made wrapping paper.  Opening weekend hours are Friday 12/2 6:00 – 9:00pm, Saturday-Sunday 12/3rd-4th 12noon – 5:00pm.

The studio at Creativity Explored

 

December 3rd – SF Camerawork Auction, 657 Mission Street, 2nd floor, Live Auction at 1pm:  If you’re looking for photography there are many pieces to choose from while supporting SF Camerawork.  SF Camerawork is a non-profit artists organization whose purpose is to stimulate dialogue, encourage inquiry and communicate ideas about contemporary photography.  SF Camerawork’s Benefit Auction of vintage and contemporary prints is on view now, culminating in a live auction at 1pm on December 3rd.  Doors open at 11 am.  View the auction catalog here.

Artists in the Auction: Anne Collier, Reid Yalom and Todd Hido

 

December 14th – 5:30 – 7:30, Haines Gallery, 49 Geary Street 5th Floor:  See Leslie Shows’ current exhibit Split Array at Haines Gallery and stay for the conversation between the artist and Lawrence Rinder, Director of the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive.  Learn how she photo realistically constructs her mixed media paintings based on pyrite rocks – more commonly known as fool’s gold.  The results are beautifully luminous paintings on aluminum panels that use sheets of plexiglass, inks, mylar, crushed glass, metal dust and engraving.

Leslie Shows, Face M, ink, acrylic, paper, aluminum leaf, and engraving on aluminum

 

On view until December 17th –, More American Photographs, at CCA Wattis Institute, 1111 Eighth Street:  This exhibit features historical photographs from the Depression-era Farm Security Administration’s photography program, which commissioned photographers to document the rural poor of America.  Curators Jens Hoffmann and Jana Blankenship commissioned 12 contemporary artists to travel the U.S. for a year and document the impact of today’s “great recession”.   Installed together along with FSA photography program objects and documents, this project aims to update the FSA file, showing how some parts of America have floundered while others have flourished.  Special talk with photographer William E. Jones on Wednesday 12/7 at 7:00pm.

Photographs by: John Vachon, Sharon Lockhart, William E. Jones and Hank Willis Thomas

 

Ongoing at SFMOMA – Jim Campbell’s Exploded Views, 151 3rd Street:  “This new installation by acclaimed San Francisco-based artist Jim Campbell explodes the moving image into three dimensions, illuminating the Haas Atrium with a flickering grid of light that is part sculpture, part cinematic screen.  Thousands of computer-controlled LED sphere create the illusion of fleeting shadow like figures that dissolve and resolve as one moves around and beneath the suspended, chandelier like matrix.  Exploded Views investigates the nuances of perception through a series of four different films, changing every two months, the first of which is a collaboration with Alonzo King’s LINES Ballet.” – SFMOMA

Watch the video of Jim Campbell describing the process of creating this piece by clicking here.

View of Exploded Views from SFMOMA's 2nd floor landing source: SFMOMA/Ayesha Ghosh

Big Blockbusters and Small Treasures at SFMoMA

Be sure not to miss Steins Collect at SFMoMA, closing September 6th.  What a thrill to explore the process and result of such passionate, dedicated and pioneering patrons.  I agree with Gertrude Stein’s advice to a younger Hemingway when he was lamenting the fact that Picasso had gotten too expensive for him – “you must buy art of your own age. “

Steinsalon

Gertrude and Leo Stein’s atelier at 27 rue de Fleurus, Paris, ca. 1908-9; photography by Teresa Ehrman; Dr. Claribel and Miss Etta Done Papers, Archives and Manuscripts Collections, The Baltimore Museum of Art.   Via flicker user, KQED News

As an aside…seeing Woody Allen’s recent film, Midnight in Paris, adds a delightful layer of nostalgic reference that brings this exhibition to life.

 

 

Small treasures…

I love how SFMoMA has used Dr. Carl Djerassi’s gift of Paul Klee works in so many different ways over the years.  In the most recent showing, Bay Area artist Andrew Schoulz was invited to respond to Klee with creation of new works on paper.  Images in Dialogue: Paul Klee and Andrew Schoultz (through January 8, 2012) shows the staying power of Klee’s legacy and his continued influence on artists that followed him.

Schoultz_CloudCity_smAndrew  Schoultz, Cloud City, 2011, acrylic and ink on paper                                                   source:  Marx & Zavattero

 

 


UntitledkleePaul Klee, Luftschlösschen (Little Castle in the Air), 1915; print; etching. Collection SFMOMA, Gift of the Djerassi Art Trust      source:  SFMoMa

Juxtaposed with Andrew Schoultz I saw new meaning in Klee’s work which has always been considered inventive and cutting edge for his time.  While Schoultz utilizes art historical references, his intensely imaginative and socio-politically charged work is unmistakably “of this age.”

JBK