What is your name? Where are you from? How did you end up here? Can you feel it? Does it hurt?
With these and other questions, American artist Adam Pendleton’s solo exhibition at the Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum sets up an elaborate call-and-response network that articulates a sense of history as fragmented poetics. The exhibition showcases a polyvocal assemblage of new and recent paintings, drawings and video portraits that together reveal Pendleton’s interest in creating a conversation between mediums as well as his belief in abstraction’s capacity to destabilize and disrupt.
Pendleton’s work is driven by his evolving concept of Black Dada, which, in 2008, he described as a “way to talk about the future while talking about the past; it is our present moment.” The term is borrowed, in part, from “Black Dada Nihilismus,” a 1964 poem by Amiri Baraka (formerly known as LeRoi Jones, 1934–2014), and it reflects the artist’s foundational project of “looking back at multiple things at once.” Premised on an approach that is asyntactic and combinatorial, his paintings and other works address the codes of representation and abstraction, the visual and literary uses of language and the aesthetics of Blackness as an open-ended signifier.
The post Adam Pendleton: To Divide By appeared first on Explore St. Louis.
- Log in to post comments