Rashid Johnson on David Hammons, Andy Goldsworthy, and His Own Anxiety of Movement

Similar documents
Full-Contact Ceramics: Sculptor Brie Ruais on Wrestling Conceptual Statements From Mountains of Clay

RASHID JOHNSON STRANGER 27 MAY 10 SEPTEMBER 2017

how does this collaboration work? is it an equal partnership?

Moriarity, Bridget. Jose Davila Creates Sculptures from Glass, Stones and Gravity, Sight Unseen, April 24, 2017.

Instant Words Group 1

Middle Eastern Circle Presents: An Evening with Hassan Khan October 26, 2016, at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum

The Senses at first let in particular Ideas. (Essay Concerning Human Understanding I.II.15)

Metaphors in the Discourse of Jazz. Kenneth W. Cook Russell T. Alfonso

Section I. Quotations

Meet Roberto Lugo, the ceramicist changing the politics of clay

ABSS HIGH FREQUENCY WORDS LIST C List A K, Lists A & B 1 st Grade, Lists A, B, & C 2 nd Grade Fundations Correlated

JAUME PLENSA with Laila Pedro

*High Frequency Words also found in Texas Treasures Updated 8/19/11

Melike Kara. Interview. Lucas Leclère. Is there a particular reason why you decided to live here? portrait by Jan Kaps, photography by

Brooklyn Says OY! Brooklyn Responds YO! Deborah Kass at The Brooklyn Museum

Jaume Plensa with Laila Pedro

BECOMING A CHIEF OF OBJECTS

Cambridge International Examinations Cambridge International Advanced Subsidiary and Advanced Level

THE POSTMAN PICTURES ON THE WALL

GAGOSIAN VIRGIL ABLOH AND TAKASHI MURAKAMI ARE CHANGING THE CONVERSATION ONE COLLABORATION AT A TIME. Sara Roffino

How to Cure World Blindness: An Interview with Joel Ross and Jason Creps June 23rd, 2013 CAROLINE KOEBEL

SFMOMA: Artist Initiative Responds to Predictive Engineering Friday, September 16, 2017

Yoshua Okón, still from Octopus (Pulpo), 2011; image courtesy the artist.

AN EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH RINUS VAN DE VELDE // EVERYTHING YOU ALWAYS WANTED TO KNOW ABOUT PAINTINGS

Audition the Actor, Not the Part

JULIA DAULT'S MARK BY SAVANNAH O'LEARY PHOTOGRAPHY CHRISTOPHER GABELLO

BEFORE WE BEGIN, LET S MEET. HI! I AM MELISSA WEATHERALL

Lexie World (The Three Lost Kids, #1) Chapter 1- Where My Socks Disappear

High Frequency Word Sheets Words 1-10 Words Words Words Words 41-50

Bharti KHER SCULPTURE

Studio Visit: Erin O Keefe

The Goat Who Hated Easter by Mary Engquist

Take a look back at some of the Taubman's most notable art installations

Q&A Rashid Johnson on Making Art "About the Bigger Issues in Life" By Andrew M. Goldstein Dec. 31, 2013

Time-Based Media Art Working Group Interview

Basic Sight Words - Preprimer

Inboden, Gudrun Wartesaal Reinhard Mucha 1982 pg 1 of 11

(These drafts were written with Victoria Posner and edited by Marianna Shek) SPACE INVADERS (STATION TWO - PART ONE) LEVEL ONE

First 100 High Frequency Words

Power Words come. she. here. * these words account for up to 50% of all words in school texts

Who will make the Princess laugh?

Notes on Gadamer, The Relevance of the Beautiful

When Methods Meet: Visual Methods and Comics

WHY READ AUTOBIOGRAPHIES?

the words that have been used to describe me. Even though the words might be

Jennifer Keeler-Milne Education Kit:

But of course it will go for hundreds of thousands

The Three Eyes and Modern Art

TAINTED LOVE. by WALTER WYKES CHARACTERS MAN BOY GIRL. SETTING A bare stage

Like A Rolling Stone

When did you start working outside of the black box and why?

Foes just scored a goal, but I m not here eating fries cause what robbed me of my appetite is that different weird stomach growl. Maybe gobblin

File No WORLD TRADE CENTER TASK FORCE INTERVIEW FRANK PASTOR. Interview Date: October 23, Transcribed by Maureen McCormick

ONVERS ATIONS IN MIND

Asymmetrical Symmetry

Why We Study Rhetoric

The Arms. Mark Brooks.

The Cognitive Nature of Metonymy and Its Implications for English Vocabulary Teaching

You will be notified two hours after your session whether you will be required for Round 2.

Clearing Emotions After Social Events:

sustainability and quality

Jumping Bodies By ReadWorks

Chapter 18: Using Verbs Correctly Principal Parts, Regular and Irregular Verbs, Tense Voice

Frances Goodman On Contemporary Art, Acrylic Nails, And Feminism

Rachel Rose.

In this essay, I criticise the arguments made in Dickie's article The Myth of the Aesthetic

The Reality of Experimental Architecture: An Interview with Lebbeus Woods By Lorrie Flom

Experiments and Experience in SP173. MIT Student

Working With Pain in Meditation and Daily Life (Week 2 Part 2) A talk by Ines Freedman 09/20/06 - transcribed and lightly edited

Theatrical Planning Guide & Theatrical Chain Of Command

Social justice has the problem of being interpreted from many points of view.

not to be republished NCERT Taro s Reward Before you read

YOU'LL MISS ME WHEN I'M GONE. Written by. Richard Russell

The Ten Minute Tutor Read a long Video A-11. DRINKS Flavoured Milk $1.80 Plain Milk $0.90 Low Fat Milk $0.90

Theatre of the Mind (Iteration 2) Joyce Ma. April 2006

Voices of Lebanon Valley College 150th Anniversary Oral History Project. Lebanon Valley College Archives Vernon and Doris Bishop Library

Personality Portrait. Joyce Ma and Fay Dearborn. November 2005

Pennies on the Dollar. by Ryan Warren.

L.4.4a L.3.4a L.2.4a

ARE YOU UNDER SURVEILLANCE?

EILEEN: Age Plain-looking. Wears mismatched clothes. No make-up. SKIP: Age Gangly, messy hair. Mismatched clothes.

Sculpture Park. Judith Shea, who completed a piece here at the ranch, introduced us.

Imagery Group Assignment. I Think I Can, I Think I Can / Small Group Practice Activity

Student Learning Assessment for ART 100 Katie Frank

IN-SIGHT A THESIS SUBMITTED TO THE GRADUATE DIVISION OF THE UNIVERSITY OF HAWAI'I IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE DEGREE OF

MIT Alumni Books Podcast The Proof and the Pudding

EXERCISE A: Match the idioms in column A with their meanings in column B.

Oral history for library history

GAGOSIAN GALLERY. Gregory Crewdson

A Practice Approach to Paradox. Paula Jarzabkowski Professor of Strategic Management Cass Business School

THE SEXUALLY LIBERATED WOMAN PODCAST Ep. 12: Depression & Dry Spells

My work comes out of being frustrated about the human condition. And about how people refuse to understand other people

Arctic Monkeys Lyrics. "I Bet You Look Good On The Dancefloor"

Kaelyn Parker Figurative Language in Song Lyrics Lit Pkt.

Let Freedom Ring: Music & Poetry of Black History. About the Production...

Kant IV The Analogies The Schematism updated: 2/2/12. Reading: 78-88, In General

Supermarket Self-Care in the Age of Anxiety

Diamond Stingily: Doing the Best I Can

Five Tapping Scripts to get you Started

Chapter 12. Circumstantials

Transcription:

Rashid Johnson on David Hammons, Andy Goldsworthy, and His Own Anxiety of Movement By Dylan Kerr, Nov. 10, 2015 The artist Rashid Johnson. Photo: Eric Vogel It may come as a surprise that Rashid Johnson s show Anxious Men, on view through December 20 th at the Drawing Center, features some of the artist s first forays into figuration outside of his photographs and films. Anyone who delves deeply into the African-American experience can t help but grapple with questions of representation and racialized bodies, and Johnson has confronted these issues head on with a sensitivity and wit that have made him one of the most sought-after artists of his generation. Even so, he s moved away from the figurative photographic work that brought him art world renown in the wake of the Studio Museum in Harlem s pivotal 2001 group show Freestyle. His recent output seems to shift the conversation towards more conceptual terrain. Many works in his 2012 solo show Rashid Johnson: Message to Our Folks at MCA Chicago saw the body conspicuously absent, displaced by symbolically-loaded materials like shea butter, potted plants, mirrors, and Persian rugs along with books by Black Power thinkers like Amiri Baraka. The black soap and wax compositions in Anxious Men can be read as an attempt to bridge the gap between these two aspects of his career. As Johnson suggests in this conversation with Artspace s Dylan Kerr (conducted on the occasion of the release of Phaidon s new

book Body of Art), the ways in which the body is used, rather than represented, in art can be powerfully illuminating. What are some artists that have been influential on your thinking about the place of the body in art? Three names come to mind. The first is Wolfgang Laib, who often used his body to spread his pollen through spaces. His use of materials has a lot in common with things that I ve thought about over the last few years. Another artist is David Hammons, for his use of his body in films and performances likephat Free or Bliz-aard Ball Sale and probably even more directly through his body prints. The third artist who comes to mind, perhaps unexpectedly, is Andy Goldsworthy. Andy makes me think about the positions that he puts his body in while making sculptures in space. When I think about the body in art as an artist practitioner, I think more about the movement of the artist than I do the representation of the body. I think about how the body moves or is forced into action as an artwork is being made. I don t really think about traditional easel painting, because I think that those movements are so controlled, so micro, so process-driven compared to other ways of making art the painter with a brush representing the body seems more like a psychological study than a physical act. That doesn t mean I lack appreciation for that way of working, of course, but I m more interested in the ways a practitioner has to move their body physically in relationship to an artwork. I guess Hammons s body prints would split the baby they obviously function as a representation of the body, but they also call to mind the force that the artist s body needs to go through to represent itself in the most direct sense. It seems to me that is one of the crucial turns in 20 th century art refocusing attention on the physical act of art making rather than the end product exclusively. Definitely this is a very contemporary perspective. The idea is really born post-pollock, where the body becomes a tool. Pollock s body essentially functions as a brush. From my perspective in art as an artist, the time after that Abstract Expressionist period is when the principles that I continue to adhere to were born. You have the psychological drama of the body as well as the tension of interacting with material it becomes the instrument for how that material is distributed, but also how the ideas around that material are distributed. The body is kind of forced into whatever position it needs to be in to allow that representation to become accessible. How does a Land Artist like Andy Goldsworthy fit into this paradigm? America The Beautiful by David Hammons (1968) For most of us that are familiar with Andy s work, one of the go-tos is the film Rivers and Tides. What you really learn about his practice through that film is that his body is subject to conditions outside of itself while

he s making art. He s making work with ice, so you have take into account that he s outside, and it s fucking freezing cold. If he s working in a stream, he s soaking wet. He s manipulating these materials that are, more often than not, particularly cooperative. The idea for me is that the artist doesn t necessarily have to be in the cozy condition in order to make art. We usually think about the more traditional practice of an artist in their studio. We might think that they re starving, but we sure as hell don t think that they re wet or freezing or physically uncomfortable. It s interesting to think about how that physical state affects the decisions that we make and what positions we re willing to put ourselves in when making something it s a different perspective on the body in art that just sort of jumped out at me when I started thinking about it. What is Goldsworthy willing to subject his body to in order to fulfill whatever his expectations or goals are for an artwork? Balanced ice column, Helbeck Craggs, Cumbria, 5 January 1985, by Andy Goldsworthy (1985) For me, I m often making work with heavier materials, so I m really empathetic to the idea of the artist having to physically lift or otherwise participate with the materials before the work is installed before it can be witnessed. More often than not, we come to art as a witness. We usually don t take into account the conditions under which these objects were made nor can we, really. In a lot of ways art is intended to suspend disbelief, so maybe we re not even supposed to engage with that aspect, but I do. What did it take to make this? is one of the questions I ask myself when I look at an artwork. I m interested in how it came to be as well as its goal or conceptual framework. David Hammons strikes me another artist who, at least in some of his work, points to the labor required to realize a piece. Absolutely. I like to bear witness to that kind of labor. In another way, I think an artist like William Pope.L fits into that formulation. Totally. I d say that he foregrounds it. I think about something like The Great White Way, where the body becomes this vehicle for dressup while also talking about the struggle that it takes to get from A to B when you ve made a decision to do that in a way that s inherently complex. I guess that the performance of making art is really the most salient aspect of all the artists that I m talking about. There s something inherently performative in the way that they proceed, but the final artwork is not always a performance per se. I really see this in Laib s work as well the end result is just a room full of pollen, but the piece starts to open up as you start to think about what it took to get there.

Absolutely. You can see how his body moved in a circle how did that cyclical movement become what we re left with? For him, it s also about the gathering of the material. Laib is the one who collects this pollen it s not like he sent out an assistant to buy it from the store. He puts himself in a position to acquire the materials, with that acquisition being, in some ways, part of the artwork and part of what his body had to negotiate for the artwork to be born and acceptable to an audience. Do you see any of these ideas we ve been talking about at work in your show at the Drawing Center? I do. I think the way I would make that marriage is through process and how I make those artworks. There s something about those pieces that is very much about the anxiety of movement. You re dealing with a material that has to be negotiated in a short period of time. The black soap and wax is melted down into a liquid, and after it s poured you have between five and ten minutes to manipulate it. It s a very short period of time, and when you re dealing with this kind of time constraint your body has to engage with the material with a certain speed in order to be able to manipulate to the place that I like those works to get to. It s not as if I can think about other things and come back to it my body is committed to moving in that space during that period of time. Wolfgang Laib installing Pollen From Hazelnut at MoMA, 2013 I think this process definitely has a relationship to Hammons s body prints. Once your body is covered in that grease, you lay down on the paper and it s done. There s no opportunity to manipulate it further. It s either successful or it s a failed object. I think there s a similar thing being negotiated by an artist like Laib, too. He s gathered the material and he s put it into the space in a certain way, but I imagine it is what it is once it hits the ground. His use of beeswax on some of his sculptures seems to be doing the same kind of thing.

Throughout my body of work, I ve been concerned with how you can manipulate something while moving around it. I don't ever approach an artwork from a specific direction. I generally don t stand in front of an artwork and work from one position I often work on the floor, so I m approaching it from several different directions. It s not dissimilar from Laib approaching his circles, or Hammons approaching the paper that he s going to put his body on. He s coming from multiple angles, because he s trying to figure out how to attack it. They always call the boxing ring the squared circle, and you can compare this process to a fight. If you get in a fight and just stand in one place in front of the person you re fighting, that wouldn t necessarily work. This could be applied to anything. Think about sex you have to move. You can t just stay in one place. In either metaphor, you re probably not going to be successful. [Laughs.] Exactly. This is how I try to think about approaching artworks, and that inherently takes the negotiation of where you are as opposed to the flatter concern of where the object is. So much of my work plays with these ideas. I recently reproduced an Allan Kaprow Happening or sculpture event for FIAC, where I built a wall based on his piece Sweet Wall that he built in 1970 in Berlin. I built a wall out of shea butter in front of the Petit Palais in Paris, so mine is called Shea Wall. I did it in collaboration with the Kaprow estate, so it was a really interesting opportunity to pay homage to and work through an idea of an artist I have a tremendous amount of respect for. The physical nature of building that wall as both a performance and a discussion of labor and all the things that come with those concerns. It speaks pretty directly to a lot of the things that we just talked about. Installation shot of Shea Wall, 2015. Photo: Emilie Pillot

How did this Happening come about? It s a real melding of the worlds. I share a gallery [Hauser & Wirth] with the Kaprow estate. I ve seen them allow other artists to work with some of his performances in the past they re pretty good about granting the agency to explore his works. When I came across Sweet Wall, I started thinking about what wall building means in the present context. Kaprow was obviously referring to the Berlin Wall in 1970, but when you think about what s happening today in terms of conversations about walls and accessibility. If you think about Trump s "platform" of building a giant wall, or what s happening in Europe with Syrian refugees it s not necessarily a discussion of wall building, but the discussion of access and borders. I was looking at what all this means to us right now, so it felt like an appropriate time to grant myself the opportunity to discuss that. Luckily, the circumstances were such that it was a possibility for me, so I just ran with it.