Mark Bradford
Thievery by Servants
Lévy Gorvy Dayan, New York
February 19 - April 4, 2026
Born in 1961 in Los Angeles, Mark Bradford has emerged as one of the most distinctive and powerful voices in contemporary American art. His childhood in South Central—an area shaped by racial tensions, economic inequalities, and the shifting cultural dynamics of the city—forms the foundation of an artistic sensibility deeply attuned to social structures. Before entering the California Institute of the Arts, Mark Bradford worked in his mother’s hair salon, a space that was at once intimate and communal, where stories, gestures, and materials circulated freely. This experience, far from anecdotal, shaped his understanding of the world: it offered him an embodied knowledge of urban micro‑territories, marginalized forms of sociability, and the material textures of everyday life.
At CalArts, where he earned his MFA in 1997, Mark Bradford developed a practice that reconfigures the codes of abstraction by anchoring them in a critical reading of social space. His work is constructed from modest materials—torn posters, end papers from hairdressing, cardboard, string, and urban debris—which he accumulates, glues, tears, sands, or scrapes. These gestures, rooted as much in manual labor as in urban practices of collage and erasure, produce stratified surfaces that evoke fragmented cartographies, urban palimpsests, or archives under tension. For Mark Bradford, abstraction is never a retreat from reality; it becomes a tool of inquiry, a way of making visible the social forces that shape territories and bodies.
The themes that run through his work—race, African American identity, urban segregation, structural violence, collective memory—are part of a broader reflection on power and dominant narratives. Bradford interrogates how cities are built and undone, how communities are displaced, how histories are erased or rewritten. His often monumental works function as critical cartographies: they reveal the fault lines, zones of tension, and invisible circulations that compose the social geography of the United States.
Several emblematic projects testify to this ambition. Scorched Earth (2015), presented at the Hammer Museum, revisits the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre, a long‑suppressed episode of American racial history. Through its scale and materiality, the installation brings to the surface the violence embedded in the strata of time and urban space. In 2017, Mark Bradford represented the United States at the Venice Biennale with Tomorrow Is Another Day, transforming the American Pavilion into a space of ruins, debris, and reconstruction—a metaphor for a nation marked by its contradictions and wounds. That same year, Pickett’s Charge, a circular installation at the Hirshhorn Museum, reinterpreted an engraving of the Battle of Gettysburg to question national mythologies and the heroic narratives that shape collective memory.
Bradford’s engagement extends beyond the museum sphere. Through Art + Practice, the organization he co‑founded in Los Angeles, he develops support programs for young people in precarious situations, particularly those in the foster care system. This social dimension is not peripheral but rather an extension of his artistic practice: it affirms the continuity between artistic creation, civic responsibility, and the transformation of living conditions.
Today, Mark Bradford is recognized as one of the most influential artists of his generation. His work, exhibited in major international institutions, articulates with rare coherence the formal power of abstraction and the depth of political reflection. By bringing together modest materials and structural issues, manual gestures and social cartographies, Mark Bradford offers a sensitive and critical reading of the contemporary world, where art becomes a space of memory, resistance, and reinvention.