Chasing Justice
Arnold Mesches, Johanna Barron, Robbin Henderson
The Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco
November 19, 2015 - Febuary 21, 2016
Johanna Barron
Robbin Henderson
The Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco
736 Mission Street (btwn. 3rd and 4th Streets), San Francisco, CA 94103
www.thecjm.org
Arnold Mesches, Johanna Barron, Robbin Henderson
The Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco
November 19, 2015 - Febuary 21, 2016
Johanna Barron
Gene Davis, Black Rhythm, 2015. Acrylic on board, 67 x 53 in. Courtesy of the artist.
Chasing Justice. On view November 19, 2015–February 21, 2016. The Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco.
Inspired by the biblical exhortation of Deuteronomy (16:20) to “pursue justice and justice alone,” The Contemporary Jewish Museum (The CJM) presents Chasing Justice, a new exhibition featuring the work of Arnold Mesches, Johanna Barron, and Robbin Henderson, three artists of Jewish heritage who have, through activism, research, and engagement with the government, produced bodies of work that explore different approaches to this Jewish commitment. From surveillance to arrest, the three artists shine a light on controversial government practices that often remain hidden, unseen, or forgotten.
“Amid current political debates over hi-tech surveillance, from the NSA to iPhone videos of police actions, this exhibition explores issues of government surveillance and power—both historically and today,” says Curator Renny Pritikin. “Chasing Justice is a timely exploration of how three contemporary Jewish artists engage with government bureaucracies and familial legacies in an effort to create a more just world.”
Director Lori Starr adds, “Whether it is using censored FBI files to create revelatory art, enabling audiences to peer into the hidden hallways of power, or seeing how a woman’s fight for justice resonates today, this exhibition provides so many opportunities to reflect on and discuss themes increasingly relevant to twenty-first century life.”
Arnold Mesches
Chasing Justice features ten pieces from Arnold Mesches’ series The FBI Files (2001–03). A life-long activist, Arnold Mesches petitioned the government for access to the FBI’s files on him, utilizing the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) to better understand the way his government has tracked and viewed him. When more than seven hundred pages of his FBI file were released—containing often-heavily redacted records dating from the 1940s through the 1970s—Mesches saw those pages as a canvas. By adding color, images from popular culture, and creating juxtapositions between the new elements and the blacked-out sheets of paper, Mesches turned the government’s investigations of him into portals for creative expression, resulting in the creation of a kind of illuminated manuscript for the modern world.
Arnold Mesches
The FBI Files 8, 2001. Acrylic on board and paper, 32 1/2 x 39 1/8 in.
Courtesy of the artist and Life on Mars Gallery, Brooklyn, NY.
Chasing Justice. On view November 19, 2015–February 21, 2016. The Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco.
Arnold Mesches
The FBI Files 53, 2003. Acrylic on paper on canvas, 12 x 9 in.
Courtesy of the artist and Life on Mars Gallery, Brooklyn, NY.
Chasing Justice. On view November 19, 2015–February 21, 2016. The Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco.
Arnold Mesches lives in New York City and Gainesville, Florida. He has had some 141 solo exhibitions and has work in the permanent collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, the National Gallery in Washington, DC, the Albright-Knox Gallery in Buffalo, NY, and the Metropolitan Museum in New York. He has been awarded an artist fellowship by the National Endowment for the Arts and three from the Pollock–Krasner Foundation.
Johanna Barron
Johanna “Joby” Barron of Portland, Oregon, also used the FOIA to obtain the starting materials for her ongoing series Acres of Walls (2015). Barron wanted to get a glimpse inside the secretive and mysterious CIA headquarters in Virginia and requested information on the abstract paintings that hang in the hallways there. The publicly inaccessible collection was loaned to the CIA in the 1970s by Vincent Melzac, a Jewish American businessman and art collector. Barron has only been able to gain a partial accounting of these works. In Acres of Walls, Barron recreates a selection of those paintings in 3/4 scale and displays documentation of her research and interactions with the CIA including denials, appeals, redacted pages, and correspondence. Approximately twelve of the works from this series will be presented in Chasing Justice.
Johanna Barron
Thomas Downing, Fold II, 2015, acrylic on board, 48 x 67 in. Courtesy of the artist.
Chasing Justice. On view November 19, 2015–February 21, 2016. The Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco.
Johanna Barron has an MFA from UC Davis and a BA from Evergreen State, near Seattle, WA. She has had recent shows at the Peekskill Project, Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art, PDX Contemporary Art in Portland, OR, and the Pompidou Center in Paris, France. She was awarded a graduate Fellow Award and Residency by the Headlands Center for the Arts, Sausalito, CA for 2010-11.
Robbin Henderson
The third featured artist is Berkeley-based Robbin Henderson, who contributes 55 artworks created as part of her portfolio, Matilda Robbins: Immigrant, Wobbly, Feminist (2013–15). Matilda Robbins was a Jewish immigrant from Russia who became an itinerant labor activist throughout the Northeast in the years before WWII, and was also Henderson’s grandmother. Henderson’s work uses the unpublished memoir of Robbins—the leader of the first strike in Detroit against the auto industry, labor organizer, editor, social worker, and single mother—as the basis for a suite of original black and white scratchboard drawings. This includes a recreation of Matilda being arrested in Detroit. Through the creation of a sort of “graphic memoir” representing her grandmother’s story, Matilda Robbins: Immigrant, Wobbly, Feminist provides a contemporary interpretation of what pursuing justice in the early twentieth century looked like.
Robbin Légère Henderson
Matilda Arrested, Detroit, 1913, 2015, scratchboard, 14 x 11 in. Courtesy of the artist.
Chasing Justice. On view November 19, 2015–February 21, 2016. The Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco.
Robbin Légère Henderson
Matilda and Robbin c. 1943, from the A New Life: Mother by Choice Series, scratchboard, 6 ¾ x 4 ¾ in. Courtesy of the artist.
Chasing Justice. On view November 19, 2015–February 21, 2016. The Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco.
Robbin Henderson attended Reed College in Portland Oregon; holds a BA.in English Literature from UC Berkeley, and studied painting and printmaking at the San Francisco Art Institute. Her work has been shown in solo and group exhibitions in the Bay Area, Los Angeles, New York City, in Europe, Central America, and New Zealand and is in public and private collections in Washington DC; New York City; Los Angeles; Taos, New Mexico; Masterton, New Zealand; Managua, Nicaragua; and Torino, Italy.
As a complement to the work of the three featured artists, The CJM’s Teen Art Connect (TAC) interns contribute a contemporary, local perspective to the exhibition. The fifteen diverse high school students participating in this year-round paid internship will be introduced to the practice and process of artists Kate Schatz, The New York Times bestselling author of Rad American Women A–Z, and Miriam Klein Stahl, a visual artist and co- founder/lead teacher of the Arts and Humanities Academy at Berkeley High School, who will guide them in the creation of papercut portraits of unsung heroes. The portraits of individuals in the community who deserve recognition as activists and positive change-makers will be accompanied by short bios. This is the first time that art by TAC interns is being shown as part of an exhibition in the gallery itself.
Major support for The Contemporary Jewish Museum’s exhibitions and Jewish Peoplehood Programs comes from the Koret Foundation.
The Contemporary Jewish Museum, San Francisco
736 Mission Street (btwn. 3rd and 4th Streets), San Francisco, CA 94103
www.thecjm.org