RICO GATSON: Three Trips Around the Block

  • Type: event
  • Location: Exit Art, 475 Tenth Avenue, New York, New York, 10018, US
  • Starts: Sep 30 2011 at 7:00PM
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Exit Art is pleased to present RICO GATSON: Three Trips Around the Block, a 15-year retrospective of work by New York artist Rico Gatson. This exhibition is the third in Exit Art’s SOLO program, aimed at providing public visibility for under-recognized,mid-career artists though one person shows at Exit Art.
 
Brooklyn-based Rico Gatson was born in 1966 in Augusta,
Georgia and raised in Riverside, California. His work generates collective memory through the exploration of symbols and images
culled from popular culture and the mass media, questioning issues of identity, racial intolerance, and the status quo.
 
Three Trips Around the Block is a survey of Gatson’s sculpture, painting, video, drawings, and installations, including several new pieces created for the exhibition. The title of the retrospective stems from a powerful experience Gatson had with his brother who, after spending fifteen years in prison, reconnected with the artist by taking a long walk around the block. The conversation that occurred
during their “trips around the block” inspired Gatson to creatively explore their own disparate lives – a personal excavation made public in this poignant and provocative exhibition.
 
In Two Heads in a Box (1994), the earliest work included in the
exhibition, Gatson inverts the racial stereotype made popular by the white American singer Al Jolson, who performed in blackface
during the 1920s and ‘30s. The artist, in whiteface and adorned with a white smile and cardboard tie, tirelessly sings the lyrics to “Let Me Sing and I’m Happy” until his exhaustion is visible. A compelling and haunting endurance test, Two Heads in a Box marks the beginning of Gatson’s exploration of racial and identity rhetoric.
 
Merging history, current events, and mass culture, Gatson’s videos, paintings, and sculptures are politically and racially charged commentaries on American culture. His two- and three-dimensional works are as thought provoking as his videos—abstractions in black and white become politically loaded symbols, and sculptures turn to totems of racism and hate. In the newly commissioned work, Gatson creates landscapes that harness the power and energy of the 1965 Watts riots, which spawned the Black Panthers and other
social organizations of the 1960s. Critic Ida Panicelli wrote in Artforum: “Gatson works with precision, exploring power symbols as elements of collective imagination and bringing to
light their potential for manipulation.”
 
Rico Gatson received a BA in Studio Art from Bethel College, St. Paul, MN and an MFA from Yale University. His work has been
shown at Prospect.1 Biennial, New Orleans, LA; New Museum, New York, NY; Brooklyn Museum, Brooklyn, NY; Cheekwood Museum, Nashville, TN; and in two seminal exhibitions at the Studio Museum in Harlem, NY that traveled to The Santa Monica Museum of Art: Black Belt and FREESTYLE. His work is included in numerous public and private collections: the Denver Art Museum, Norton
Family Foundation, and The Studio Museum of Harlem, among others. He is represented by Ronald Feldman Fine Arts and teaches at Sarah Lawrence College and New York University.
 
PUBLIC PROGRAM
 
Friday, October 14 / 7:30pm
RICO GATSON: Video Works
This one-night only program compiles Rico Gatson’s complete
discography of single-channel videos and presents a special single-channel version of Gatson’s important work “Spirit, Myth, Ritual and Liberation” (2008). A mini-retrospective, the 15-years of videos represented here reflect themes of racial antagonism, social rhetoric, and political commentary.    
Q&A with the artist after the screening.
$5 general admission. Cash bar.