쥬이시뮤지엄 컬러리스트 7인전 'Overflow, Afterglow: New Work in Chromatic Figuration'(5/24-9/15)
Overflow, Afterglow: New Work in Chromatic Figuration
May 24, 2024 – September 15, 2024
The Jewish Museum
Ilana Savdie, Cow, 2023. Oil, acrylic, and beeswax on canvas stretched on panel. 65 1/8 × 80 1/8 in. (165.4 × 203.5 cm). The Jewish Museum, New York. Photo by Lance Brewer.
EXHIBITION FEATURING THE WORK OF SEVEN EMERGING ARTISTS WHO CHALLENGE THE BOUNDARIES OF TRADITIONAL FIGURATIVE ART
New works in painting, sculpture, and installation by Sula Bermúdez-Silverman, Sasha Gordon, Sara Issakharian, Chella Man, Ilana Savdie, Austin Martin White, and Rosha Yaghmai
New York, NY, May 9, 2024—The Jewish Museum presents Overflow, Afterglow: New Work in Chromatic Figuration , on view from May 24 through September 15, 2024. Featuring new works in painting, sculpture, and installation by Sula Bermúdez-Silverman, Sasha Gordon, Sara Issakharian, Chella Man, Ilana Savdie, Austin Martin White, and Rosha Yaghmai, the exhibition explores how vibrant color and luminescence challenge the boundaries of traditional figuration. The works on view highlight the figure’s malleability and continuing metamorphosis, expressing the lived experiences of a multiethnic, multiracial, and otherwise multifaceted group of makers.
Overflow, Afterglow brings together seven young artists whose use of color and distortion of the figure expand cultural norms—whether nodding to pop culture and digital immersion, the vibrancies of their heritages, or spaces of youthful and queer liberation. Responding to the social and political turmoil of the past decade and absorbing input from different backgrounds and histories, these artists articulate new visual vocabularies. The exhibition also builds upon the Jewish Museum’s ongoing practice of exploring contemporary art in real time, providing a platform for each new generation of artists.
The exhibition design for Overflow, Afterglow offers a non-hierarchical experience of the works on view. Each artist presents new and recent works within their own installation space, providing a portal into their separate worlds. Much of the work on view has been newly created for this exhibition.
Sula Bermúdez-Silverman
Born in 1993, New York; lives and works in Los Angeles
Bermúdez-Silverman infuses her sculptures with shape-shifting luminescence that radiates beyond their outermost edges. She arrives at her sculptures through rigorous research, exploring postcolonial legacies and tracing the ways they continue to mold contemporary realities. Bermúdez-Silverman starts with an intense interest in the cultural narratives of materials. She often chooses commodities such as sugar and minerals that have a deep relationship to the history of European colonialism. The complex matrix of materials and embodied histories held together in her work juxtaposes elements that are both familiar and eerie, producing a jarring effect.
In Repository I: Mother (2021), a ghostly translucent house molded from the artist’s childhood dollhouse is cast from colored sugar. Its glowing pink surface illuminates the sinister ways that gender silently operates in domestic environments and our everyday lives. Recent explorations include the appropriation of Chinese decorative forms in European Chinoiserie furniture (Heliades, 2024) and the eerie fluorescence of uranium glass, which contains materials that are commonly mined from indigenous lands (Leetso I, 2023).
Sasha Gordon
Born in 1998, Somers, New York; lives and works in Brooklyn
Sasha Gordon’s surreal dreamscapes are bold representations of the artist’s multifaceted self, populated with her doppelgängers. Their skin tones are often imbued with color to emphasize intense emotional states through electric palettes. Gordon’s compositions visualize an inner monologue expressing her fraught experience growing up in a predominantly white suburb as a queer Korean Jewish American. In recent works, Gordon expresses her defiant strength and transfixing power as an artist through the off-center gaze of her confident figures. In these lush, prismatic, and world-building compositions, they unabashedly take up space and seek out pleasure, making magic out of the mundane.
Her new self-portrait, Head Count (2024), refracts in a dynamic composition that is rendered in intricate detail via two perspectives. The artist’s body is further entangled with that of her partner’s in an intimate and meticulously choreographed love scene. Palette is key to the allure of Gordon’s everyday yet extraordinary scenes; in this case the pink and crimson flesh seem to radiate heat.
Sara Issakharian
Born in 1983, Tehran; lives and works in Los Angeles, Berlin, and Tehran
In Sara Issakharian’s paintings violence and mysticism go hand in hand. She depicts atrocious events of our time allegorically, casting anthropomorphic figures in epic scenes of mythological struggle. Among her themes are state-sanctioned violence and the oppression of women in her native Iran, the enduring trauma of war, and the push and pull of emigration. Issakharian works through these painful subjects with a language of forms and figures rendered in both delicate, gentle strokes and bold, propulsive marks of charcoal and pastel. In her monumentally scaled works, clandestine activity, disruption, and apprehensive tranquility all coexist in a dynamic interplay.
Issakharian’s practice is an intensely personal engagement with her own cultural heritage as an immigrant of Iranian Jewish origin. The work And every moment a whole summer (2024) is awash in chromatic and compositional chaos: the figures, drawn from eclectic cultural references, are massed together and detached from their original contexts. She scrambles together characters from Disney films and ancient origin myths, figurines related to classical sculpture, and forest animals drawn from Persian miniatures. In the resulting nebulous pastel cloud, there is a sense of placelessness, unease, and uncertainty, as the figures appear to flee an invisible, timeless force.
Chella Man
Born in 1998, Pennsylvania; lives and works in Brooklyn
The notion of identity existing on continuums that cut through the confines of binaries is central to Chella Man’s practice. Myriad and fluid conceptions of the self inform their painting, sculpture, writing, performance, film, and advocacy work, all of which draw from Man’s own lived experience as Deaf, transmasculine, genderqueer, Chinese and Jewish. Man’s practice is a reclamation and celebration of these inherent multiplicities.
Their most ambitious performance and installation to date, Autonomy, provides an intimate encounter with a clone of their nude body bathed in warm golden-hour light. In a performance co-presented by the Jewish Museum and Performance Space on May 2, 2024, Man painstakingly and lovingly recreated the scars and tattoos that grace their body on the silicone clone, memorializing their long journey of gender transition, and exercising autonomy over their own body. The result of this performance is presented in installation form in Overflow, Afterglow. Autonomy does not center trauma, struggle, discrimination, or exclusion (though not for lack of such experiences), and instead foregrounds resilience, remembrance, curiosity, and care—for the self, for others, for family, and chosen families. Man emphasizes joy and rest as defenses against the unsettling backdrop of gender politics in the U.S. and beyond, presenting their body cradled by the afterglow of transformation.
Ilana Savdie
Born in 1986, Barranquilla, Colombia; lives and works in Brooklyn
Through chromatic saturation and density of imagery, Ilana Savdie embraces abundance as a strategy to subvert figuration. Her signature palette combines luminous fluorescent colors with the shocking contrast of deep, rich hues. Although Savdie’s works center on the body, and her canvases contend with figures, they put forth only phantom fragments of realism. Glimpses of torsos and limbs are drenched in sweeping flows of leaky paint, broad-brushed gleaming color, and dimpled, skin-like textures created with wax. Inherited familial legacies of the Jewish diaspora are also at play in her work, guiding her exploration of placelessness; Savdie’s family came from Egypt, Lebanon, Romania, Poland, and Venezuela, arriving in Colombia as the result of numerous conflicts and expulsions. Drawing on such upheaval and cultural fluidity, she is able to balance multiple contexts and traditions. Savdie leverages an enveloping scale and dynamic, gestural forms, inviting the viewer to examine intricate details from a state of near disorientation.
A particular interest in Savdie’s new body of work are the dynamics between predator and prey, autonomy and forced dependence—emblems not only of hierarchical power structures but also interconnected relationships. The painting A carrot laced with cyanide (2024) broaches the perverse human desire to tame the animal world, despite its sublime grandeur. The work departs from an image of a circus ringmaster forcing an elephant to bow at the close of a performance. The stacked forms indicate the power of a larger body, which is subjected to the trauma of being controlled and sensationalized, exposing the sinister underbelly of spectacle. Savdie’s painting Cow (2023), in the Jewish Museum collection, is also a part of the installation.
Austin Martin White
Born 1984, Detroit; lives and works in Philadelphia
In Austin Martin White’s work, paint oozes out from the surface of the picture plane, escaping its limits. Layers of dense and vibrant color push through and spill over the contours of the figures. The artist draws from a range of colonial-era art historical and ethnographic sources to probe the way their power dynamics are perpetuated in the contemporary moment. He first alters his reference images via hand drawing and digital tools before rendering fragments of them using a repurposed vinyl-cutting machine to generate a negative image, similar to printmaking techniques. White then pushes his signature mixture of liquid rubber and pigment through the back of his substrate, a process of manual extrusion which creates a vibrant relief. The resulting compositions are textured and topographical, matte and glossy, brightly colored and darkly shadowed, and at points, glowing. Their seepages of color and light emphasize amorphous shapes over any crisp lines to create figures. White’s process renders his source materials nearly unrecognizable, effectively removing any fixed idea or definition that the original images conveyed.
The painting runawaydaddy (2024) incorporates elements of figures from the influential mid-20th century painter Bob Thompson’s work as well as ethnographic imagery. Like Thompson, White refutes realist representation in favor of planes of vibrant color that only loosely nod to figuration. He draws focus to the way the picture plane is made through his excessive use of paint, imbuing the surface with texture. Pigment seems to crawl out of his figures, exposing the materiality of his artwork. This work reminds the viewer that artistic forms are always a construction of human hands and imagination, and a product of its maker’s political interests.
Rosha Yaghmai
Born in 1978, Santa Monica, CA; lives and works in Los Angeles
Rosha Yaghmai’s Afterimage series pushes figuration to its most far-flung possibilities, harnessing layers of pure color to evoke the aura of figures she intentionally removes from her compositions. These works address notions of inheritance and collective memory that are absorbed through the body but become abstracted through generations and over great geographical distances. The blurred swaths of color connect to images that emerge when we stare directly into a bright light and overstimulate our retinas. An inverted, residual copy imprints on our field of vision, unmoored from the physical world. Such afterimages are the direct apparition of what is happening inside the body.
To create her Afterimage series, Yaghmai airbrushes blurry contours and pockets of color onto single layers of fabric. The compositions loosely interpret residual images that have stuck in her mind from past-life visualizations; they are also related to reproductions of historical Persian miniature paintings, from which she digitally removes the figures. These traditional works decorated her childhood home in California in homage to Iran, her father’s homeland, where the artist was conceived but has never visited. The artist arranges layers of painted, translucent fabric, one on top of the other, creating shimmering new compositions that bear only traces of their source material.