Tag: exhibition

  • Untitled (The struggle to survive, beautifully, wild and wayward, expressed in the practice of everyday life)

    AG2020-W&E_1890228a-012

    Untitled (The struggle to survive, beautifully, wild and wayward,
    expressed in the practice of everyday life)
    2020
    Archival pigment print
    15 x 10 inches

  • Line Drawn through Sentimental Journeys

    Marisa Newman Projects on Art.sy

  • Some works in Conditions and Forms for blck Longevity at CAAM

    Untitled (Street view, View Park), 2017
    Archival pigment print

    Untitled (Potted rose), 2017
    Archival pigment print


    Installation view at California African American Museum.

    Untitled (We will join Malcolm) iv, 2017
    Solvent transfer, graphite ink, colored pencil, collage,
    and enamel paint on paper
    30 x 22 1/4 inches

    Untitled (We will join Malcolm) ii, 2017
    Solvent transfer, graphite ink, colored pencil, collage,
    and enamel paint on paper
    30 x 22 1/4 inches

    Untitled (Let’s cultivate our garden), 2017
    Solvent transfer, graphite ink, colored pencil, collage,
    and enamel paint on paper
    45 x 30 inches

    Untitled (Street view, View Park), 2017
    Archival pigment print
    14 x 21 inches

    Untitled (Potted rose), 2017
    Archival pigment print
    14 x 21 inches

    Some more via hrdwrker:

    Some more images, courtesy of CAAM and Brian Forrest

    Guerrier_Adler_9

    Guerrier_Adler_10

    AG2018-CAAM_Guerrier Install 07a2

  • Blck, Red, & Tang

    Shown at Newman Popiashvili Gallery, Blck, Red & Tang opened May 2008.


    Also, shown in Formulating a Plot at PAMM.

  • Harlemworld : Metropolis as Metaphor, 2004

    harlemworld Wall Text

    The 20th century delivered a great deal of change for Harlem. Originally developed as a summer alternative to lower Manhattan, Harlem became the center of modern black life in New York City after World War I. During the 1920s, Harlem gained increasing significance as artists, writers, musicians and black intelligencia gathered to create some of the most pivotal work of the last century. After World War II, Harlem entered a period of continued growth along with social and economic challenges that continued for many years to come. This era of transition was marked by efforts toward revitalization that continue today. Likewise, the portrayal of Harlem in pop culture has become increasingly important to the formation of an American identity. From the swinging days of the Cotton Club and Amateur Night at the Apollo Theater to today’s hip-hop music videos, Harlem exists not only as a community of avenues and streets, but also as an active force in world culture.

    Organized by Thelma Golden, SMH Chief Curator, harlemworld: Metropolis as Metaphor includes works by eighteen emerging architects that explore the ways that Harlem exists in our imaginations as a site for cultural, territorial, psychological and architectural ideas. The participants were asked to act as informants, and embrace the real and symbolic role that architects have in shaping the texture of a city. harlemworld is a timely project that uses this historic neighborhood as a point of departure to study, discuss and critique the ever-changing face of Harlem. While these projects initiate in Harlem, they move beyond its geographic boundaries to look at similar issues in other urban contexts around the world.

    The exhibitions themes are as expansive and diverse as Harlem itself. The contributing architects come from a variety of academic and professional backgrounds. Some of them work in academia, and private or public practices, while others work outside of the formal realm of architecture and bring their training to various media and disciplines. They were chosen for their inspired embrace of multi-media practices and for the creativity and rigor evidenced in their previous endeavors. The architects involved not only bring a multitude of perspectives and approaches to architecture, but they also forge strong connections between visual art, anthropology, sociology, economics, history, technology and popular culture through their practices.

    Along with the buildings and structures that help to define Harlem, photography has played a pivotal role in documenting and understanding this neighborhood. Known for his iconic photography of Harlem, James VanDerZee documented the diversity and history of this famous community. harlemworld includes new bodies of work by three contemporary photographers Alice Attie, Adler Guerrier and Kira Lynn Harris, who individually depict an aspect of Harlem’s present as a counterpoint to the works envisioned by the architects.

    As context is often critical to understanding contemporary visual culture, all of the exhibitions at the Studio Museum are affected socially, culturally and even aesthetically by being located in Harlem. For this exhibition, the words Harlem and world are joined together with the subtitle Metropolis as Metaphor because this exhibition seeks to understand Harlem beyond the bricks and mortar and territorial designations of the streets and avenues that define Harlem, USA. And as such, it provides a powerful lens to not only re-examine our community but to understand the black urban experience worldwide. harlemworld allows the Studio Museum, which has transformed along with Harlem to offer the institution as a place to engage in the larger cultural, political and intellectual dialogue about this evolving community.

    harlemworld: metropolis as metaphor (press release).

    Winter 2004: January 28 – April 4

    If walls could talk, there would be a distinct murmur in Harlem. Brownstones, churches, and apartments would whisper about old New York’s gentry. Storefronts would reminisce about the times when Harlemites Shim-shamed and Lindy-hopped. An arcaded ballroom would speak witness to the assassination of an activist. And what edifice among us would keep his mouth shut about the looming era of regentrification? Yes, there’s a lot to talk about.

    Known for standing on the cutting edge of curatorial practice, Thelma Golden has put her ear to the wall to organize harlemworld. Golden has invited over a dozen of today’s the most compelling black architects to present ideas and proposals for multiple sites around Harlem. These practitioners will contemplate Harlem as a cultural, architectural, territorial, psychological, historic, and economic site. harlemworld will not be limited a presentation of these projects only through traditional model and plan form, but also through photography, video, digital media, and installation.

    The exhibition also will include a photography component, with work by James VanDerZee, Alice Attie, Kira Lynn Harris and Adler Guerrier.

    Participating Architects

    Nathaniel Belcher/ Steven Slaughter
    Milton S.F. Curry
    J. Yolande Daniels
    Felicia Davis
    Darell Wayne Fields
    Zevilla Jackson Preston
    Olalekan B. Jeyifous
    Coleman A. Jordan
    Gordon Kipping
    Leyden Lewis
    Ronald L. Norsworthy, II
    Todd Palmer
    Emmanuel Pratt
    Shawn Rickenbacker
    Amanda Williams
    Wiber Williams
    William Williams

    Participating Photographers

    Adler Guerrier
    Kira Lynn Harris
    Alice Attie
    James VanDerZee

    Exhibition catalogue
    Publisher: The Studio Museum in Harlem
    Author: Thelma Golden
    Title: harlemworld: Metropolis as Metaphor
    Edition: Volume I
    Pages: 120+ pages w/4 page cover (flaps)
    All color
    Print Run: 5,000
    size: 9 x 12 upright
    Territories of distribution: USA
    Language the catalogue will be printed in: English
    Each architect has designed 2 double page spreads for the catalogue, which will also include essays by exhibition curator Thelma Golden, Greg Tate, Cheryl Finley, Mable O. Wilson, and Susan Cahan.


    Untitled(A Circuiteer about Harlem, St. Nicolas Park) 2003 Thirteen Chromogenic prints; 16 x 20 inches(12) and 16 x 35 inches(1).


    Untitled(A Circuiteer about Harlem, Hotel Theresa) 2003 Eight 16 x 20 inches chromogenic prints.

  • Works in “The Devil is in the Details”

    The Devil is in the Details – Curated by Jesus Fuenmayor at KaBe Contemporary
    September 17 – November 20, 2015
    Iván Argote, Arocha + Schraenen, Lothar Baumgarten, Matthew Buckingham, Elena Damiani, Adler Guerrier, Jorge Pedro Núñez, Edgar Orlaineta, Laercio Redondo, Matheus Rocha Pitta, Sergio Vega.

    AG2013-Untitled(black orange rhombus)1010574
    untitled(black orange rhombus) 2013
    wood-stain, glass, plywood

    AG2013-Untitled(black orange tan)1010559
    untitled(black orange tan) 2013
    wood-stain, plywood

    AG2015-Untitled(sharing in a market-mediated access economy-stadium)1010553
    untitled(sharing in a market-mediated access economy-stadium) 2015
    enamel paint, chipboard, wire, wood and coroplast.

    AG2015-Untitled(Versus)1010593
    untitled(versus) 2015
    enamel paint, wood, plexiglass, newspaper, plywood, coroplast

    ag2015-KBC_untitledvanga_1010855a
    untitled(vanga) 2015
    enamel paint, wire, wood and coroplast

    ag2015-KBC_untitledgnomonwithalateralpenchant_1010814a
    Untitled (Gnomon with a lateral penchant) 2015
    Graphite, enamel paint, steel, reclaimed wood and plywood

  • Here, Place the Lever


    Untitled (andalusia + salzedo)
    C-print 11×14 inches
    2012


    Untitled (space for rent)
    C-print 11×14 inches
    2012


    Untitled (ixora)
    C-print 11×14 inches
    2012


    Untitled (blck chrtr)
    Watercolor, acrylic, graphite and collage on paper 60×42 inches
    2012


    Untitled (sketch- Here. Place the Lever III)
    Acrylic, watercolor, color pencil, graphite on paper 10 x 15 inches 2012

    Untitled (sketch- Here. Place the Lever IV)
    Acrylic, watercolor, color pencil, graphite on paper 10 x 15 inches 2012

    Untitled (Re-Elect Wrong)
    Watercolor, acrylic, graphite, collage on paper 60 x 42 inches 2012

    Untitled (Senary System II)
    Watercolor, acrylic, graphite on paper 22 x 30 inches 2012

    Untitled (Senary System I)
    Watercolor, acrylic, graphite on paper 22 x 30 inches 2012

    Untitled (Participant in a plot)
    Watercolor, acrylic, graphite, color pencil on paper 22 x 30 inches 2012

    David Castillo Gallery
    September 8- October 5, 2012

  • A Longer Shinbone

    alongershinbone-cjphoto

    Untitled(fétiche/musée imaginaire)
    Spray paint and collage on paper.
    2011

    At Francie Bishop Good’s studio, Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Info.

  • untitled(mdfr lobby)

    A rendering for my proposal for MDFR lobby.

    snatched from facebook

    Press release.  The invitation snatched from facebook.