February
23 – March 30, 2013
Opening
reception: Saturday, February 23, 6 – 8 PM
2727
South La Cienega Boulevard
Los
Angeles, CA
Blum
& Poe is very pleased to present an exhibition of new work by Los
Angeles-based artist Henry Taylor. This exhibition marks Taylor's second solo
exhibition with the gallery and continues his exploration of portrait painting,
while delving deeper into the history of oppression, exposing realities of the
so-called American dream. His portrait subjects typically consist of friends or
historic figures, which are painted with an unmediated sense of spontaneity and
happy accidents throughout.
In
addition to his customary portraits, Taylor introduces anonymous farm workers
captured from WPA-era photographs. A more deliberate hand is at work on these
portraits, elevating what could be simple documentation to that of a religious
or imperial icon. On the gallery floor will be rows of dirt intended to mimic
freshly plowed fields and a stately dinner table with a chandelier hanging
overhead. The juxtaposition of manual labor versus genteel living creates a
charged atmosphere, recalling the history of black American labor, as well as
the realities of all forms of blue-collar work.
In
this exhibition Taylor returns to a mainstay of his practice, using readily
available materials to create social commentary. He routinely scours the
neighborhood surrounding his Chinatown studio for discarded items, repurposing
them into installations imbued with memories of oppression and the abuses of
authority. The overall impact effectively demonstrates the subjective nature of
equality within the United States.
Henry
Taylor (born in Oxnard, California, 1958) received his bachelor of arts from
California Institute of the Arts and has had solo exhibitions at MOMA PS1,
Santa Monica Museum of Art, and Studio Museum in Harlem. He has been included
in numerous group exhibitions, including Blues for Smoke, Museum of
Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York;
Made in LA, Los Angeles Municipal Art Gallery, Los Angeles; Human Nature:
Contemporary Art from the Collection, Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los
Angeles; and 30 Americans, Rubell Family Collection, Miami, FL and North
Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, NC.
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