Mark Bradford: new work
27 Mar – 12 May 2018, Hauser & Wirth Hong Kong
Opening: Monday 26 March 2018, 6 – 8 pm
(all works 2018)
About:
Hauser & Wirth is delighted to inaugurate its Hong Kong space with new works by acclaimed American artist Mark Bradford, renowned for his large, abstract, mixed-media paintings, which often incorporate ephemera and discarded elements of urban life. This exhibition comes on the heels of a number of major public projects including ‘Tomorrow Is Another Day,’ Bradford’s widely-lauded exhibition for the United States Pavilion at the 57th Venice Biennale (which will travel to The Baltimore Museum of Art in September); ‘Pickett’s Charge,’ a monumental cyclorama commissioned for the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C.; and a 32-panel, site-specific painting of the entire US Constitution for the new American Embassy in London. The new works presented in Hong Kong are a continuation of the themes Bradford has explored throughout his entire career, most prominently the distribution and representation of power within societal structures.
Bradford has long been interested in the ways in which populations, and particularly marginalized communities, are grouped or quantified. In a number of new large-scale paintings, Bradford returns to the motif of the ‘map’ as a point of departure for mining this topic. These works are not rendered from accurate navigational tools; instead Bradford draws his reference material from archival sources, including transit maps, advertising and outdated maps used on bond securities. His base images are therefore only ever subjective representations of a city’s layout, which unintentionally communicate how urban spaces are divided accordingly to the infrastructures of power. Bradford has discussed, in relation to his map paintings, how elements of civic planning – including transit lines and water systems – were diverted around communities of wealth, but built directly through others. Using his signature vernacular of selectively layering, scoring and bleaching areas of his canvas’s surface, and employing networks of colored string, Bradford traces the human presence in these urban geographies and emphasizes the disparate communities and hidden social injustices to which his maps refer.
‘I have always been interested in the notion of community and, in the most fundamental way, in the things that separate certain groups from others,’ Bradford has said. ‘Traditionally, maps are these finite, informational tools, but in these works they evoke questions about the individuals inhabiting these spaces, and about what these printed lines aren’t necessarily showing us.’
Over the course of several years, Bradford has made works that incorporate merchant posters found on the streets, so that personal notes and political slogans merge with commercial advertising and social calls to action to represent a diverse social index and conflating conversations from across cultural terrains. Bradford returns to the merchant poster motif here in a series of small paintings that derive imagery and language from one particularly poignant advertisement used for his 2013 installation ‘Receive Calls on Your Cell Phone From Jail,’ reconfigured for the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis in 2016. Fragments from the same refrain are repeated throughout each painting, delivering instructions and a phone number for receiving calls on your cell phone from jail. By focusing on these words Bradford draws attention to the social network we are operating within, where a predatory company will take advantage of a population in crisis – the incarcerated – driven by financial gain alone.
These merchant poster works are connected to Bradford’s long-term project with the not-for-profit Rio Terà dei Pensieri – a six-year collaboration he initiated as part of his presentation for the Venice Biennale to help promote the reintegration of former inmates into society. The new paintings consider how our global justice system abandons and disregards the lives of those incarcerated, and how power is yielded over a desperate and vulnerable margin of society.
The exhibition at Hauser & Wirth Hong Kong will be on view through 12 May 2018, spanning both 15th and 16th stories of the new H Queen’s building.(courtesy: Hauser & Wirth)