Wardell Milan

Wardell Milan

49 Geary Street 4th FloorSan Francisco, CA 94108, USA Thursday, October 29, 2020–Friday, January 15, 2021


amerika: klansman, patty by wardell milan

Wardell Milan

Amerika: Klansman, Patty, 2020

Price on Request

2014/2020 202 bay st., staten island by wardell milan

Wardell Milan

2014/2020 202 Bay St., Staten Island, 2020

Price on Request

Fraenkel Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition of work by Wardell Milan. Featuring new drawings and collages, the series Wine, Death and Revolt explores ideas of over-abundance, destruction, and uprising. While earlier series such as “Parisian Landscapes” looked inward, to personal questions of freedom and desire, Milan made the works on view in response to the turmoil of the global moment.


In several large-scale works, Milan uses enlargements of his own photographs of specific locations—the Lorraine Motel in Memphis, where Martin Luther King was assassinated, or the city of Venice—setting his images in dialogue with historical sites of racist violence or political rebellion. Populating the works are a range of human figures, often nude, whose bodies are pieced together from fractured drawings and photographs, and overlaid with blue and white paint. Some groupings suggest erotic coupling or violent encounters, and many arrangements are based on photographic sources. In 2020, Los Feliz, Los Angeles, Milan positions five figures in white Ku Klux Klan hoods against his own photograph of the city’s hills. The arrangement of bodies is based on a found image of a Klan social gathering, and presents the white nationalists in a bland, contemporary California suburb. In The Parade, the arrangement of figures echoes Diane Arbus’s Untitled (7), from her final body of work made in a home for the developmentally disabled in New Jersey.


Also on view are a selection of smaller works, including white-on-white cut paper collages depicting hooded Klansmen, and paintings from Milan’s ongoing series of tulips. While earlier flower paintings were inspired by the 17th-century Dutch tulip craze, the new works deconstruct the flowers, transforming them into chaotic arrangements of petals and leaves, hinting at the dissolutions the past year has wrought.