In Conversation Tariku Shiferaw

Similar documents
The Black History Month Collection 2015

Interview with Christina Quarles June 20, 2018 Text by Ashton Cooper

MOVING TO THRIVE: ACTIVITIES FOR AGES 10 TO 18 YEARS

Visual Arts What Every Child Should Know

Jean- Baptiste Bernadet

Cross, Una-Kariim A. Kehinde Wiley Paints Brooklyn Red, EBONY, February 23, 2015.

Learning Objectives: Students will make discoveries about a work of art from the exhibition Landscape Confection

IMPORTANT: DO NOT REVEAL TITLES UNTIL AFTER DISCUSSION!

The Gentle Tension of Abstraction by Carren Jao on June 20, 2013

Parts to Whole. Miriam Svidler. IP Thesis. Section 001. April 20, 2011

Visual Art Standards Grades P-12 VISUAL ART

1991 by Faith Ringgold

re-inventions Margaret Hunter 1 22 Nov 2014 aquabitart, Berlin

James Nares Goes High Speed at Paul Kasmin Gallery By Ann Binlot

FREDERICK CARL FRIESEKE ( ) Afternoon at the Beach oil on canvas 60 x 178 in. (70 x 188 x 4 1/2 in.) 1905 / 1906 in France

The Dinner Party Curriculum Project

Kehinde Wiley American, born Charles I, oil on linen

Object[ed] Binary In Balance. Contrasting Material Sculptures Grades 3-12

Jack Whitten: Erasures

"Black Panther" Redefines The World Of Superheroes. Breaking New Ground In Film. The Story Of The "Black Panther"

things to come Limited Edition on Canvas Edition Size: x30 895

Artist photo: Roshanak

Astoria. Cover image: Napoleon, 2014 Stone, wood, acrylic 36 x 22 x 9 cm. Left: The Vanderbilt Cup, 2013 Unfired clay 31 x 25 x 13 cm

All works must be 9x12 inches and matted 12x16 inches pm

A Sense of Time, Place & Storytelling

CLUB ROCK & POP ART. by MARTIN SULLIVAN

PICASSO WHAT IF PICASSO HAD PAINTED A MODERN DAY SUPER HERO?

MY LIFE AS SISTINA SMILES HEATHER LOSEY MCGEACHY. A thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of The requirements for the degree of MASTER OF FINE ARTS

Frontier Primary School

Alexander Calder s Style In uences Chinese Contemporary Artists

CHAPTER 7. Other formal elements: texture, time, & motion

TITLING ARTWORK. Title? Have you ever encountered a book, a movie or piece of music without a title? No, so art should be no different!

In the last decade public

ANDREA DEZSÖ Slash: Paper Under the Knife

Kareem Rizk: Collage from Copenhagan

A MAKING A MARK GUIDE: LIFE DRAWING & LIFE CLASS 2008

Working with Circumstances and the Immediate Feeling for the Space

Body Proportions. from INFANT to ADULT. Using a Pencil to Measure Heads

Not Beyond Hope. Artwork, Poetry, and Prose Presented by the Inmates of the South Bay House of Correction

Lesson 5 (March): Patterns in Art Grade: 1

One Fine Day: Any Analysis of The Picnic by Archibald Motley and Ideals Hoped. Life in the 1920 s and 1930 s encompassed a whirlwind of economic

Sponsored Educational Materials Grades 7 12 IGNITE INSPIRATION! Lesson: Illustrating Characters

workbook storytelling

Grade 6: Creating. Enduring Understandings & Essential Questions

PRECONCEIVED NOTIONS OF SCALE RELATIONSHIPS. Jeffrey Bruce McClung MASTER OF FINE ARTS UNIVERSITY OF NORTH TEXAS. December 2002

MCA Kids Adventure Trail

Key Words / Formal Elements: KS3 Year 9 Art & Design Knowledge Organiser - Mondrian and De Stijl Term 1. Design Techniques: Geometric.

Installation view, West Gallery. Courtesy of Angell Gallery

BIRGIT RATHSMANN and DAVINA SEMO talk about APPROACH OR ENTER at CAPITAL, San Francisco 4 September - 17 October 2015

Guide to Projection Screens

The Pearl. Teaching Unit. Advanced Placement in English Literature and Composition. Individual Learning Packet. by John Steinbeck

NCFE 1 / level 2 Certificate in Creative Studies: Art and Design external unit

LANDSCAPE CONFECTION

Pearly White. An interview with Clive Head by Rosalyn Best

GAGOSIAN GALLERY. John Elderfield on Painted on 21st Street: Helen Frankenthaler from 1950 to John Elderfield, Sam Cornish

LAST REVIEW: NEXT REVIEW: STATUS: A COURSE TITLE: Painting I COMMON COURSE NUMBER: ART 2500C

Brown, Mark. "David Hockney changes perspective with move indoors for London show." The Guardian, April 27, Web.

National Core Arts Standards Grade 8 Creating: VA:Cr a: Document early stages of the creative process visually and/or verbally in traditional

The Drawers - Headbones Gallery

The Golden Age of FYS 129. David Keffer, Professor. The University of Tennessee Knoxville, TN

Teacher Resource Packet James Tissot: The Life of Christ. October 23, 2009 January 17, 2010

Phyllis Tuchman, Artisanal Abraction: The Elusive, Effusive Art of Amy Sillman, ARTnews, February 16, 2018

Gang Star Red (detail) (Courtesy of Todd Gray and Meliksetian Briggs)

STEPS TO A WONDERFUL LIFE. without dieting

What is Abstract Art? How can you create an Abstraction of something?

Wangechi Mutu: A Fantastic Voyage

we the curious is a space

East City Art Reviews: Always Into Now at the Torpedo Factory

July 11 - August 25 / 2015

Middlesex University Research Repository

Paolo runs. Paolo Chiasera s artistic strategy

COMPONENTS. by harry-pekka Kuusela. 1 central board. 4 player boards 2-4 (-8) (-90) 12+

With the development of memory and thus the ability to extend consciousness over time, general awareness leads to

NCFE 1 / level 2 Certificate in Creative Studies: Art and Design external unit

ALL PHOTOS BY LEAH WALKER.

Janet Fish s Jarring Experiments in Still Life Painting by Peter Malone on January 28, 2016

CHINESE ABSTRACTION SHEN CHEN PAUL CHING-BOR CUI FEI LIANGHONG FENG. March 24 - May 5, MASS MoCA Way, North Adams, MA

Preview: Juan Roberto Diago at Harvard

Learning Plan. Title: Neighborhood collage. Artist: Romare Bearden

the side facing the world

WELCOME TO THE OCONTO COUNTY 4-H PROJECT! Have fun! Oconto County 4-H COMMUNICATION (GENEALOGY FOCUS) Stay in Touch!

WOMEN AND WAR, WITH A NEW EPILOGUE BY JEAN BETHKE ELSHTAIN DOWNLOAD EBOOK : WOMEN AND WAR, WITH A NEW EPILOGUE BY JEAN BETHKE ELSHTAIN PDF

1

Huihan Liu paints vibrant portraits of landscapes and cultures from Tibet and the Western U.S.

SOTO BRIDGE & RETAINING WALL

Elements of Visual Representation Prof. Shatarupa Thakurta Roy Department of Humanities and Social Sciences Indian Institute of Technology, Kanpur

Dumpster Optics BENDING LIGHT REFLECTION

Ice Breakers. Fold it in half again. Now tear off the lower right-hand corner of the sheet.

THE WORLD THAT CHANGED THE IMAGE. fried contemporary is proud to present an exhibition by wayne barker in the collectors room

HELLO TO YOU, MOON Teachers Notes

2014 RULES AND REGULATIONS FOR STUDENTS AND TEACHERS

Teachers Pack Whitechapel Gallery. British Council Collection: Great Early Buys. 5 April June whitechapelgallery.

I have a very different viewpoint. The electric bass is a critical part of the musical foundation of the guitar choir.

Utah Museum of Contemporary Art- Utah Biennial: The Present as Influenced by the Past

IELTS Speak Test Part 1

Miata Air Radical Splitter/Protector

Jean-Michel Basquiat

BRIAN GRIFFIN. By: Henry Gorse April 9, 2016

Abstract art, nonobjective art, and nonrepresentational art, are loosely related terms.

Jonathan Beer Painting

Transcription:

In Conversation Tariku Shiferaw Growing up in Los Angeles, I was often made to feel that I did not belong as an American. I was othered, often because of my name, which sounded more foreign than I wanted it to. This initially caused me to figure out what it means to be Black and simultaneously first generation immigrant in America. Tariku Shiferaw

I'd Rather Go Blind (Etta James), 2017, acrylic on stretched plastic, 10 x 8 inches HHCo: You were born in Addis Ababa, raised in LA and now live in New York. Could you tell us a bit about what origin means to you. Do the influences of Ethiopia play a minor or more instrumental role in the way you engage with your practice in the context of a western art scene/nexus?

TS: Origin, to me, refers to an original place where my ancestors come from. If possible, it s important to remember our identities. Yes, the influences of Ethiopia play an instrumental role in the way I engage with my practice within the context of the western art world. My current body of work, One of These Black Boys comes from a place of not belonging in the canon of western art history. Growing up in Los Angeles, I was often made to feel that I did not belong as an American. I was othered, often because of my name, which sounded more foreign than I wanted it to. This initially caused me to figure out what it means to be Black and simultaneously first generation immigrant in America. HHCo: Your work plays on material spray paint sits atop plastic, swashes of rich hues are covered, barred or perhaps given structure by solid geometric blocks can you talk us through your process, your use of materials? TS: My use of material depends on the type of work I m making. Most of my paintings in this current series are made on either plastic or vinyl, and occasionally, on canvas. The works on plastic are stretched on stretcherbars with several layers of plastic. The acrylic paint is often placed on every layer of plastic, building some sort of optical depth. The works on vinyl are spray painted on the back while masking the portions I want visible with tape. When the tape is removed, it reveals the material in the background either Mylar or iridescent film. HHCo: What do these materials represent, in particular the choice of colours? TS: Most of my paintings in this body of work consist of the colours black and blue. I like blue. I ve always liked blue. But something interesting happens in the juxtaposition of black and blue, it s formally pleasing. There are multiple dichotomies that exist within the relationship of these two colours. Blue is the day sky and also reflected on bodies of water. It signifies peace and serenity, yet in music, the Blues are very sad. A similar thing happens with the colour black. It is represented in the night sky, in all its beauty it s known as the absence of light. Black and blue are also the

visible colours the Black skin bruises into. The Blues in music comes from the struggle life. I like how these two colours endlessly bounce off each other. Often times, even when I paint with transparent materials such as plastic or vinyl, I try to get these two colours to interact with the light that s passing through them and the translucent materials. Also, my blacks are often not black, they re Paynes grey, which consists of a little bit of blue. HHCo: Can you tell us a bit about how music influences your work the titles string a narrative of references, it s interesting to think about how references to lyrics and words opens up further windows. Is this how you build your language or approach for a new piece of work? Do you start with the lyrics? TS: Music has been a part of my life for as long as I can remember. I grew up listening and playing all sorts of music. It s a free form of language that speaks to many different circumstances in my life from joy, to sadness, to political displacement in society, and more. When it comes to Black diaspora music such as Hip-hop, R&B, Blues, Jazz, and Reggae, music is not just words but a culture of experienced history the ups-and-downs and the wins and losses in life. I use the song titles of these music genres to title each piece within my current body of work, One of These Black Boys. The layering of these titles marks my paintings in a way that points to the identity of the mark-maker. I usually start producing the physical work and later return to title the work. Language and naming is important in the way one claims space in western society.

I'd Free All My Sons (Nas), 2016, acrylic on stretched plastic, 64 x 54 inches

King Kunta (Kendrick Lamar), 2016, spray paint, plastic, 96 x 40 x 15 inches There are three layers of mark-making that take place in my work. The first is the marking of the paint surface. The second is the titling of the painting, which introduces references that are not based on western art history. The third takes place during the exhibition of the work, the marking of the exhibition walls in a white cube HHCo: In particular, I was interested in the work King Kunta (2016), is this based on Kunta Kinte the Alex Haley protagonist and both drawing back to Kendrick Lamar s music, or is it largely referencing Lamar s piece? TS: Yes, it is. The multiple layers of references make it one of my favourite pieces from this series. King Kunta (Kendrick Lamar) is a piece that was titled based on a track by Kendrick Lamar. The song references the character of Kunta Kinte from Alex Haley s novel the Roots. I appreciate Lamar s genius in overlaying the story of Kunta Kinte with his life in the hood. He concludes that, just like Kunta Kinte s unstoppable strive for freedom, he too will continue despite all the hatin and obstacles in his

environment. This piece is made of a draping black plastic that hangs eight feet tall with multiple blue horizontal spray-paint stripes. It resembles a majestic cape, which resounds with the title while also referring to cultural occurrences. To me, Hip-hop is the reincarnation of the Blues, which came from the struggle life. It s a different genre but often hits the same blue notes in depicting the existence of Black bodies within the context of western society. HHCo: Perhaps you can tell us a bit more about how working with music titles then pulls threads of new references into the work, immediately they inherit the references made by the artists who wrote those songs. This layering of meaning is also implicit in your layering of marks. Could you tell us a bit more about the symbolism or reading of layered meaning, marks, titles, clues or pointers. TS: There are three layers of mark-making that take place in my work. The first is the marking of the paint surface. The second is the titling of the painting, which introduces references that are not based on western art history. The third takes place during the exhibition of the work, the marking of the exhibition walls in a white cube with One of These Black Boys slightly adjusting the identities of abstract paintings. In One of These Black Boys, every piece is titled using Hip-Hop, R&B, Blues, Jazz, and Reggae music. In appropriating song titles as painting titles, the work automatically inherits the references, identities, and history portrayed through the songs. When perceived contextually, each work becomes a placeholder that occupies the walls of a white cube. The titles create a different set of content outside of the discourse of painting, which suggests an act of rebellion against a rigged past. While mark-making remains as a painting terminology, these paintings become the actual mark that interrupts the space and history. HHCo: I m interested in the representation of the black male figure in your work references to societal structures, the black male or female figure within a predominantly white arts community for example is

that a truth you grapple with in the work? TS: In One of These Black Boys, my work represents the paintings that are titled after Black diaspora music. I don t distinguish between the Black male or female gender. However, I can understand how most perceive it because of the word Boys in the title. The western art world has been the same everywhere; I don t think there s any distinction between New York and other parts of the United States, for example. The art world has always favoured white-male artists. It s the very reason why I titled this abstract body of work using Black diaspora music titles. In recent history, abstract paintings have been culturally recognized as something that belongs to white artists only. This was because only white-male artists were recognized for it, while women and artists of colour were pushed to the background. HHCo: Perception played a big part of my experience of your work. From a distance, there are bold and striking forms the hung figure of a human, visually weighted and hunched, on closer inspection is a tagged sheet of light plastic (King Kunta, 2016); blocks of black on white, strong markers of censoring perhaps, on near sight show through to details of the backstage, the wooden framework holding the artwork in place (If I ruled the world, 2016) that grey space between meaning [1] and perception can you talk to us a bit about that. TS: Yes, most of my pieces have horizontal strips covering the surface area. The piece, King Kunta (Kendrick Lamar), is made of a black plastic with blue spray paint. Unlike other works, this piece hangs from only one point atop and appears like a draping garment. Many see different things when encountering this piece. I like how it hangs like a garment, specifically like a cape of some sort; perhaps just like a superhero or a royal cape. The title King Kunta references to many things, starting with Kendrick Lamar s song, but the song refers to Alex Haley s novel Roots comparing Kunta Kinte s character to Kendrick Lamar s in his hood environment. This Hip- Hop track touches on subject matters that the Blues hit on, the struggle life and oppression.

The painting If I Rule The World (Nas) functions in a similar way. Layers of transparent plastic stretched on a stretcher bar. Between the second and third layer of stretched plastic is where the horizontal acrylic paint markings live. In the song, Nas and Lauryn Hill depict an alternative reality other than the one that s given. They search for a world without cops harassing, a world where Black men are freed, and a world where wealth is distributed to those who don t have anything. The black horizontal stripes are only supposed to mark the surface of the painting, but as the piece developed, it marked ideas of the very lyrics the piece is titled after. This is the first piece made in the series One of These Black Boys and it s where I realized the titles of these paintings had become very powerful in ways that they marked the paintings through other external references bringing them into conversation about culture and history outside of painting discourse. HHCo: There can be curiosity tied to culture and origin how do you feel about being highlighted as an Ethiopian artist or artist of Ethiopian origin, given you were raised in the US and how present and relevant do you think your origin actually is to your practice today? TS: Yes, usually there is. However, beyond the curiosity, I would hope it d help bring some positive attention to younger artists coming out of Ethiopia. My background is very important to my practice. My work wouldn t be the same if I had not experienced the complexities of being Othered for being a Black immigrant in the U.S. My identity allows me to engage society from multiple perspectives. HHCo: I am interested in questions of opacity, in terms of how Edouard Glissant explores these notions untransability, unknowability opacity s radical potentiality for social movements to challenge and subvert systems of domination. Opacity seems to be a physicality in your work that is reiterated and reimagined visually on a number of levels TS: I like how you talk about the idea of opacity, but it was not my intention. I just wanted to make paintings that had a formalist dialogue

intention. I just wanted to make paintings that had a formalist dialogue while amalgamating them with a new culture that I identified with. HHCo: At Hundred House, origin is something we think about on a daily basis trade, fair exchange and ethical integrity. One half of our team is also from Mauritius, a small island steeped in colonial history, in hard human marks made and felt upon cultures living today that tread back hundreds of years. We re really interested in getting to grips with the origins that we work with, to highlight what is current about a place on site at origin and also with the diaspora stemming from that place. Looking towards Ethiopia are there any artists or musicians that you would recommend we keep an eye/ear out for? Are there galleries, music venues, cultural spots you d recommend us to seek out next time we are there? TS: I like Teddy Afro s music. Yes, check out Addis Fine Art and the local artist they represent in Ethiopia. HHCo: Turning to where you live now, New York, is there anywhere you d recommend a visitor to check out, places you particularly enjoy? TS: Studio Museum Harlem, Brooklyn Museum, The New Museum, Basquiat s Bottle (restaurant/bar), and I m sure there many I m forgetting at this moment [1] Tadias Magazine, September 11, 2018 For more visit: tarikushiferaw.com

If I Rule The World (Nas), 2016, acrylic on stretched plastic, 64 x 54 inches In the song, Nas and Lauryn Hill depict an alternative reality other than the one that s given. They search for a world without cops harassing, a world where Black men are freed, and a world where wealth is distributed to those who don t have anything.