Tricknology

Tricknology

100 South Spring Street Aspen, CO 81611, USA Friday, July 26, 2019–Monday, September 9, 2019 Opening Reception: Friday, July 26, 2019, 5 p.m.–8 p.m.


floridawater iv by allison janae hamilton

Allison Janae Hamilton

Floridawater IV, 2019

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floridwater ii by allison janae hamilton

Allison Janae Hamilton

Floridwater II, 2019

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Marianne Boesky Gallery is pleased to announce an exhibition curated  by artist Sanford Biggers, featuring the work of artists Allison Janae  Hamilton and ektor garcia—both of whom have long- standing relationships  with Biggers. Hamilton and garcia are recognized for their complex,  narrative-infused tactile sculptures and installation pieces. This  exhibition will explore the ways in which both artists use materials to  evoke history and define new mythologies—aspects of this approach are  also present in Biggers’ own practice. Titled Tricknology, the  exhibition takes its name from a line in a song by the group Brand  Nubian that directly calls out the importance embracing one’s self,  soul, and narrative as one. The exhibition celebrates this concept and  practice, while critically viewing the dominant narratives that underlie  our knowledge of art, culture, and history. Tricknology will  be on view at Marianne Boesky Gallery’s location in Aspen, Colorado,  from July 26 through September 9. 


As part of the exhibition, both  Hamilton and garcia will present new work. “In their seminal song Wake Up, the hip hop group Brand  Nubian calls out the importance of re-claiming history and  self-knowledge in order to see through the tricknology employed by those  in power,” said Sanford Biggers. “The works that Allison and ektor make  are enigmatic, layered, and nimble in their respective uses of personal  and cultural history as well as materials. They both offer visionary  insight and tools for us to construct new narratives, and I look forward to collaborating with them on this exhibition.” 

Hamilton’s connections to America’s Southern and rural landscapes are  at the center of her practice and the narratives she weaves within her  work. Her visually-rich installations, sculptures, and video pieces  incorporate and layer ideas and themes from across a wide range of  subjects, including contemporary African-American culture, folklore, the  traditions of Southern farm life, and Baptist hymns. Dynamic and  complex in the way it builds meaning, Hamilton’s work inspires and  incites the viewer to take action. Floridawater II, a recent  photographic work, for example, captures a body submerged in a dense and  fertile body of water. Through the subject’s state of suspended  animation, Hamilton references the traditions of baptism or immersion by  water as well as deities of both birth and water, such as Yemoja or Venus. 

At the same time, Floridawater II alludes to the  relationships between labor and southern coastal waterways, as the image  was captured within a channel of interconnected rivers at the  headsprings of the “Slave Canal” in Hamilton’s home region of North  Florida. In this way, Hamilton’s work also addresses salient issues  affecting contemporary life, such as the impact of land loss,  environmental justice, and climate change. This is also seen in her  series Yard Signs, which is comprised of wood panels marked  with text and symbols that reference nature’s power to carry and contain  collective narratives and histories, while also being susceptible to  destruction. Her works are power objects that call to the viewer,  disrupting and repositioning our understanding of many traditional  “American” narratives and encouraging a reassessment of often  unchallenged and deeply rooted histories, notions, and preconceptions. 

garcia’s work speaks to the viewer through its unfixed state and  ability to engage with and react to its environment. Many of his objects feature chains or links, creating connections between different  elements while also alluding to notions of breakage and reformation  along new lines. poor celana, which is included in the upcoming  presentation, is comprised of a glazed porcelain vessel that is weighed  down by chains. While it seems immobile, it also suggests an  opportunity for combining with another. Like Hamilton, garcia’s practice  is focused on inciting the viewer to action. To this end, he uses a  range of materials and processes—from crochet, weaving and fiber-work,  to terra cotta, stoneware, and porcelain, as well as myriad found  objects—to create complex assemblages and multi-layered works. In using  these varied materials, garcia produces work that asks critical  questions about our collective responsibility in creating and upholding  societal structures and the narratives they are built upon. In bola de,  a brightly colored spherical vessel that includes layers, cuts, and  accretions to its ceramics body, garcia references age and history,  alluding to an unknown past and people. garcia also uses his own history  and cultural traditions in his practice, namely in his faithful use of  crochet techniques from Tabasco in Zacetcas, Mexico.   

Allison Janae Hamilton (b. 1984) was born in  Kentucky, raised in Florida, and her maternal family's farm and  homestead lies in the rural flatlands of western Tennessee. Hamilton's  relationship with these locations forms the cornerstone of her artwork.  Hamilton has exhibited her work at the Museum of Modern Art, New York,  NY; Storm King Art Center, New Winsor, NY; the Studio Museum in Harlem,  MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY; the Smithsonian National Portrait  Gallery, Washington, DC; the Jewish Museum, New York, NY; Fundación  Botín, Santander, Spain; the Brighton Photo Biennial, Brighton, UK; and  the Istanbul Design Biennial, Istanbul, Turkey. Solo exhibitions of her  work include Pitch at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art  (MASS MoCA), North Adams, MA (2018); Passage at Atlanta Contemporary,  Atlanta, GA (2018); and Wonder Room at Recess, New York, NY (2017). She  is the recipient of the Creative Capital Award and the Rema Hort Mann  Foundation Grant, as well as wide range of residencies. Hamilton's work  is in numerous private and public collections including the Studio  Museum in Harlem and Arte Al Límite. Hamilton received her PhD in  American Studies from New York University and her MFA in Visual Arts  from Columbia University. She lives and works in New York, NY. 

ektor garcia (b. 1985) was born in Red Bluff,  California. He received his BFA from the School of the Art Institute of  Chicago in 2014, and his MFA from Columbia University, New York in 2016.  garcia’s solo exhibitions include those at Cooper Cole, Toronto,  Canada; Museum Folkwang, Essen, Germany; Art Basel, Basel, Switzerland;  kurimanzutto, Mexico City, Mexico. Group exhibitions include those at  LAXART, Los Angeles, CA; New Museum, Salon 94, and Sargent’s Daughters,  New York, NY; Chicken Coop Contemporary, Portland, OR; Museo de Arte de  Zapopan, Guadalajara, Mexico; ACCA, Melbourne, Australia. garcia lives  and works between Mexico, New York, and wherever he loses himself. 

Sanford Biggers’s (b. 1970) diverse practice  explores the often overlooked cultural and political narratives of  American history through the use of antique quilts, found objects,  installation, film, and performance. His work is an interplay of  history, narrative, and perspective speaking to current social,  political, and economic happenings as well as the historical context  that bore them. Biggers’ work has appeared in venues worldwide. He has  had solo exhibitions at the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis (2018),  the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit (2016), the Massachusetts Museum  of Contemporary Art (2012) and the Brooklyn Museum (2011), among others.  His work has been shown in several institutional group exhibitions,  including at the Menil Collection (2008) and the Tate Modern (2007), and  also recent exhibitions at the Metropolitan Museum of Art (2017) and  the Barnes Foundation (2017). In winter 2017, Biggers was awarded the  prestigious Rome Prize in Visual Arts by the American Academy in Rome.  Biggers’ work is also held in the permanent collections of the Museum of  Modern Art, New York; the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; the  Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Museum of Contemporary  Art, Chicago; the Walker Center, Minneapolis; the National Museum of  African American History and Culture, Washington D.C.; the Dallas Museum  of Art, Dallas; and the Legacy Museum, Montgomery, among others.  Originally from Los Angeles, Biggers has been based in New York since  1999.

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For more information about Tricknology, please contact Gallery  Director Stephanie Gabriel at [email protected] or  212-680-9889. For exhibition press inquiries, please contact Alina  Sumajin, PAVE Communications and Consulting, at [email protected] or  646-369-2050.