Rashid Johnson, The New Black Yoga (Video still), 2011, 16 mm film transferred to DVD with sound, 10 min 57 sec duration. Credits: © Rashid Johnson Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth Photography by Martin Parsekian. Image via eyes-toward-the-dove.com. |
Magic
Numbers
June 23 – August 28, 2014
Opening reception: Friday, June 20, 2014, 7:00 -
9:30pm
Public Conversation: Rashid Johnson with
Katherine Brinson, associate curator at the Guggenheim New York, Saturday, June
21, 2014, 12:00 – 1:00pm
80
Kifissias Avenue
Athens,
Greece
From press
release:
The George
Economou Collection is pleased to announce Magic
Numbers, a solo exhibition by American artist Rashid Johnson. Curated by
the artist in collaboration with Katherine Brinson, associate curator at the
Guggenheim Museum New York, and Skarlet Smatana, director of the Economou
Collection, the exhibition features a site-specific installation of works
largely conceived on the occasion of the exhibition.
Since
coming to prominence in the early 200s, Johnson has forged a nuanced and
diverse body of work that explores the complex contemporary and historical
forces that shape identity. His paintings, photographs, videos, and sculptures
draw on a shifting corpus of references spanning music, literature,
intellectual history, and pop culture, interwoven with dense autobiographical
valences. His installations often take the form of wall-mounted shelves that
suspend together found objects such as books, vinyl records, CB radios, plants,
and oyster shells, imbuing them with a new, talismanic significance. In recent
years, Johnson has also increasingly worked in a purely abstract vein, mining
the legacy of modernist abstraction while exploiting the unique expressive
potential of his vocabulary of unconventional materials.
Magic Numbers takes as its starting point a film by
Johnson in the George Economou Collection, The
New Black Yoga (2001). This emblematic work grounds a group of new
paintings and sculptures that advance a number of longstanding formal and
conceptual impulses in the artist’s oeuvre. In the first gallery, a wall of mirror
tiles will form the backdrop to a configuration of objects charged with
intensely personal symbolism as well as broader cultural influctions. In
relationship to this monumental work, Johnson has drawn on the forms of
Brazilian modernist furniture to create an enigmatic vessel for one of his most
resonant materials, shea butter – the unctuous fat derived from a nut
indigenous to Africa that isprized for its healing emollient properties.
At the
heart of the exhibition will be a gallery devoted to The New Black Yoga, a short film that depicts a group of five young
African American men in a sublime natural setting performing a series of
choreographed movements that are in turn balletic, athletic, and martial.
Originating in the artist’s absurd experience of attempting to participate in a
yoga class conducted in a foreign language, the work broadens into a
disorientating collision of codes and signifiers, playing on Johnson’s
pervasive interest in constructing fictive fraternal collectives and ambiguous
rituals. The video begins and ends with the image of a crosshairs target – a
symbol appropriated from the log of hip hop group Public Enemy which here takes
on a more oblique, runic connotation.
The crosshairs
icon will resurface in the final gallery, where Johnson’s sculpture Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos (2012)
functions as both a stark portent of aggression and a serene study in geometric
forms. It will be installed with a group of abstract compositions that deploy
burned wood, cast bronze, black soap and wax to forge surging topographies interrupted
by the artist’s additive and subtractive mark-making. Together, the works in
the exhibition will channel Jonson’s current preoccupation with notions of
hybridity and metamorphosis, cohering into an immersive environment freighted
with narrative possibilities.
The exhibition
is accompanied by an illustrated catalogue that includes an essay by Katherine
Brinson, associate curator at the Guggenheim New York.
Rashid Johnson's The New Black Yoga from Rod Lamborn on Vimeo.
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