iona ROZEAL brown, Live !, 2013, Acrylic, ink and gold leaf on wooden panel, 72 × 60 inches (183 × 152 cm).
Image via salon94.com.
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no one's ever gonna love
you, so don't wonder
February 28 - March 29, 2013
February 28 - March 29, 2013
37
West 57th Street
New
York, NY
introducing...THE HOUSE OF BANDO
March 8 - April 25, 2013
introducing...THE HOUSE OF BANDO
March 8 - April 25, 2013
One
Freeman Alley
New
York, NY
Edward Tyler Nahem Fine Art and Salon 94 Freemans are pleased to collaborate on exhibitions featuring artist iona ROZEAL brown, in her first solo shows with each. The galleries coincided their shows to highlight brownʼs multiple mediums and expansive imagination. Both bodies of work represent chapters in the artistʼs ongoing myth "on spirit children and the like," an ever-expanding pantheon of other-worldly, gender-unspecific, cross-cultural spirits.
Five
new paintings, including a diptych measuring five by eight feet, are featured
at Edward Tyler Nahem Fine Art. The new works reflect brownʼs continued fascination
with the ukiyo-e woodblock prints of late-Edo period Japan, in particular the
works of 19th century printmaker Utamaro Kitagawa, who was widely considered as
the greatest exponent of this style of woodblock prints. rozeal brown
referenced the artist and his work in her earlier a3 blackface series. The Japanese tradition of erotic art,
Shunga, continues to play a strong role in ROZEAL brownʼs work with intimacy
emphasized over ostentation in the imagery. Titles of the works are loosely
based on verses of the Song of Solomon as well as hip-hop rhymes. Additionally,
the artist incorporates a haiku poem on the back of each.
Brown
also mines the rich cross-cultural territory of the ganguro, a subculture of Japanese adolescents that sports tanned
skin, bright makeup, blonde wigs, and gold chains, in order to model themselves
after the stereotypical African- American hip-hop look—the word ganguro translates literally to
“blackface.” Luxury accessories like strands of pearls and oversized gold
jewelry are featured throughout brown’s compositions, on display with overlaid
irregular patterns and painterly drips on raw woodgrain in brown’s signature
approach to figuration.
introducing…THE HOUSE OF BANDO, at Salon 94 Freemans is comprised of a series of painted portraits of Benny and Javier Ninja, of the Legendary House of Ninja, along with Monstah Black. The performers were all featured in "the battle of yestermore," the artistʼs critically lauded commission at the 2011 Performa festival. The three formed the House of Bando with brown as homage to Bando Tamasaboro, the famed female impersonator or onnagata of the Kabuki stage. The exhibited paintings are derived from photos taken for an upcoming collaboration with photographer Joshua Cogan and, as installed, reflect the artistʼs own take on Byzantine iconography.
The
portraits continue Brown’s ongoing body of cultural and mythological remixing,
an artistic practice that mirrors the artist’s own DJ strategies of sampling,
mixing, and syncing. The new works are meant to represent icons, angels, and
archangels, and they take from tropes of Byzantine iconography in idiosyncratic
ways. The African-American characters are painted with bright white and gold
highlights on thick panels of raw woodgrain, the white and the wood functioning
as markers of purity, the natural and the heavenly. Multicolored circular
shapes stand in for speakers, records, and turntables while doubling also as
halos encircling the figures. The works have edges painted with silver ring
patterns meant to echo the control knobs of a turntable. The surfaces are
imbued throughout with self-conscious drips, a formal code and deliberate
reference to a particularly masculine brand of mid-century modernist painting.
iona
ROZEAL brown is a native of Washington DC and a graduate of the San Francisco
Art Institute and Yale University. In addition to her critically acclaimed
commission for Performa 2011, the artist has been featured in solo exhibitions
at the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington DC, MoCA Detroit, MoCA Cleveland,
and the Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford. She currently lives and
works in Brooklyn.
iona ROZEAL brown, Pod 222: The Reunion (Song of Solomon 5:10-11), 2013, Acrylic, marker, ink, krink and graphite on wood panel,
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