Showing posts with label The Broad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Broad. Show all posts

03/05/25

Jeffrey Gibson @ The Broad, Los Angeles - "the space in which to place me" Exhibition

Jeffrey Gibson 
the space in which to place me
The Broad, Los Angeles
May 10 - September 28, 2025

Jeffrey Gibson
Jeffrey Gibson 
BIRDS FLYING HIGH YOU KNOW HOW I FEEL, 2024 
Mural, acrylic on Polytab, 
12 ft. 6 ¾ in. × 26 ft. 5 ¾ in. (382.9 × 807.1 cm)

The Broad presents Jeffrey Gibson: the space in which to place me, a special exhibition of the artist’s multidimensional work, adapted from its original presentation at the U.S. Pavilion at the 60th Venice Biennale in 2024, where Jeffrey Gibson was the first Indigenous artist to represent the United States with a solo exhibition. Gibson’s first single-artist museum exhibition in Southern California, The Broad’s presentation includes over thirty artworks joyously affirming the artist’s radically inclusive vision. The exhibition highlights Gibson’s distinct use of geometric design and saturated color alongside references to 19th and 20th century foundational American documents and modern music, critiquing systemic injustices and imagining a more equitable future.

Jeffrey Gibson: the space in which to place me borrows its title from the Oglala Lakota poet Layli Long Soldier’s poem “Ȟe Sápa,” which contemplates Indigeneity using a playful geometric format. Like Long Soldier, Gibson probes the visceral feeling of belonging. Across ten paintings, seven sculptures, eight flags, three murals, and one video installation, Jeffrey Gibson honors the multiplicity of identity. Museum galleries morph into kaleidoscopic environments of Gibson’s paintings.

Jeffrey Gibson
Jeffrey Gibson 
THE RETURNED MALE STUDENT FAR TOO FREQUENTLY 
GOES BACK TO THE RESERVATION AND FALLS INTO THE 
OLD CUSTOM OF LETTING HIS HAIR GROW LONG, 2024 
Acrylic on canvas, glass beads, plastic beads, 
inset in a custom wood frame
244.8 x 194cm (96 3/8 x 76 3/8in)

The Broad has acquired Gibson’s 2024 painting THE RETURNED MALE STUDENT FAR TOO FREQUENTLY GOES BACK TO THE RESERVATION AND FALLS INTO THE OLD CUSTOM OF LETTING HIS HAIR GROW LONG, which was first presented at the Venice Biennale. Incorporating his signature use of patterned text, radiating color, and glass beads, the painting directly quotes a letter written in 1902 by the Commissioner of Indian Affairs to a school superintendent in Central California, urging Native school children to cut their hair and assimilate into white Eurocentric modes of dress and appearance. The painting transforms historical oppression into both an opposition to tyranny and a celebration of cultural identity.

The Broad’s presentation includes two additional artworks first displayed together in Gibson’s 2020 Brooklyn Museum exhibition, When Fire Is Applied to a Stone It Cracks. A monumental bronze from the museum’s collection by Charles Cary Rumsey titled The Dying Indian (1900s) wears newly commissioned moccasins by John Little Sun Murie titled I’M GONNA RUN WITH EVERY MINUTE I CAN BORROW (2019). The Roberta Flack lyrics featured from the 1971 song See You Then are also spelled in the beadwork on the moccasins. These works speak to overarching themes in the space in which to place me, whether directly engaging in America’s past and present, paying tribute to histories of resistance, and boldly celebrating belonging, while bringing into this dialogue the topic of monumental sculpture as a mode of US historytelling.
“Jeffrey Gibson imbues unabashed radiant color into his paintings, murals, sculpture and video installations, signaling through his art that frank examination of difficult truths can be affirmative expressions of hope, identity and beauty,” said Joanne Heyler, Founding Director of The Broad. She added, “We are proud to be bringing this groundbreaking work to Los Angeles, directly from the Venice Biennale, where for the first time an Indigenous artist represented the United States, and we hope our audiences will be dazzled by the joy they convey and the belief in the resilience of community the works represent.”
Gibson’s practice celebrates individuals and communities who have maintained their dignity and traditions in impossible circumstances. His work reflects his admiration and respect for the generations of Indigenous makers who have come before him, situating his work within art histories that have previously excluded Native artists, and in the footsteps of postwar painters and printmakers such as Corita Kent, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, and Andy Warhol. Jeffrey Gibson uses recognizable language and images and unsettles the beliefs that might typically be associated with them.
“Developing this project for the Venice Biennale made me interrogate my relationship with the United States as an Indigenous person,” said Jeffrey Gibson. "I wanted to showcase that complexity while celebrating the resilience and joy present in the liberation stories and legacies of Indigenous makers. The show is about turning margin and center inside out, putting topics and people who have been pushed aside in the spotlight. I’m excited for the project to reach audiences in Los Angeles—in a way it’s coming home, from representing the country on an international stage to speaking to histories that are part of our lived experiences here in the U.S.”

“Across the exhibition’s diverse media, Jeffrey Gibson engages a wide range of texts, from foundational legal documents to quotes from civil rights activists, poems by Indigenous authors, and pop song lyrics,” said Sarah Loyer, Curator and Exhibitions Manager. “Kaleidoscopic colors and geometric forms are combined with these references to create an installation that at once pays tribute to histories of resistance in the United States and expresses the relational nature of identity and belonging, all articulated in a style that is vivacious and optimistic.”
On view are towering ceramic sculptures like WE WANT TO BE FREE (2024), made with colorful nylon fringe, tin jingles, and steel. Standing at nine-feet tall, the figure’s torso spells out its title in beads as a political demand, referencing the Civil Rights Act of 1866, the first federal law to define citizenship and claim all citizens equal under the law. Alongside its companion sculpture The Enforcer (2024), the two figures possess an ancestral presence to serve as protective guardians.

The Broad’s exhibition also includes geometric mixed-media paintings in Gibson’s distinct and internationally celebrated style. The large-scale mixed media painting ACTION NOW ACTION IS ELOQUENCE (2024) references Congressman Emmanuel Celler’s words to his fellow representatives during a session of Congress in 1964 when they were voting on the Civil Rights Act. The landmark civil rights legislation was signed into law that day, and outlaws discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, and national origin in the United States. The surface is adorned with a beaded, heart-shaped bag and sash made by an Indigenous Columbia River Plateau or Crow artist, acknowledging a lineage of unnamed Indigenous makers and extending a living Native art history.

The mural BIRDS FLYING HIGH YOU KNOW HOW I FEEL (2024) borrows lyrics from the song Feeling Good, originally composed by Anthony Newley and Leslie Bricusse and made famous by the American singer Nina Simone in 1965, an anthem for freedom and justice during the Civil Rights era. Synchronized, abstract avian shapes are centered between the title’s geometric text and a glowing yellow sun in the background. This mural exemplifies Gibson’s ability to demonstrate how history informs our present, locating significant moments of collective power, persistence, and strength amidst oppression.

Jeffrey Gibson collaborates with The Broad on a dynamic slate of programming. The relationship between art and community is central to Gibson’s practice. These performances, talks, and workshops create spaces for recognition and response, inviting audiences to engage more deeply with his work. 

Born in Colorado in 1972, interdisciplinary artist JEFFREY GIBSON is a member of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians and of Cherokee descent. Gibson received a Bachelor of Fine Arts in painting from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1995 and his Master of Arts in painting from the Royal College of Art, London, in 1998. Throughout his career, Jeffrey Gibson has centered Indigenous and LGBTQ+ perspectives, exploring cultural authenticity, stereotypes of Native people, and how aesthetics circulate amongst different groups. Vibrant colors, geometric patterns and found objects are common throughout his art, resulting in a distinct visual language that celebrates interconnectedness and assemblage.

Jeffrey Gibson: the space in which to place me was first presented by Portland Art Museum, Oregon, and SITE Santa Fe, New Mexico at the United States Pavilion of La Biennale di Venezia, the 60th International Art Exhibition (April 20, 2024 through November 24, 2024); commissioned by Louis Grachos, Phillips Executive Director, SITE Santa Fe; commissioned and curated by Kathleen Ash-Milby, Curator of Native American Art, Portland Art Museum and Abigail Winograd, Independent Curator. 

The Broad’s presentation is organized by Sarah Loyer, Curator and Exhibitions Manager, with the participation of Abigail Winograd.

THE BROAD
221 S. Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90012

06/01/24

Mickalene Thomas: All About Love @ The Broad, Los Angeles + Other Venues

Mickalene Thomas: All About Love
The Broad, Los Angeles
May 25 - September 29, 2024

Mickalene Thomas
Mickalene Thomas 
Din avec la main dans le miroir et jupe rouge, 2023 
Rhinestones, acrylic and glitter on canvas mounted on
wood panel. 90 x 110 in (228.6 x 279.4 cm) 
© Mickalene Thomas

The Broad announces the launch of a new touring special exhibition Mickalene Thomas: All About Love. Co-organized by the Hayward Gallery, London, and The Broad, Los Angeles, and in partnership with the Barnes Foundation, Philadelphia, Mickalene Thomas: All About Love is the first major international tour of this pioneering artist’s work. Marking its debut at The Broad with over 80 works made by the artist over the last 20 years, the exhibition highlights how Thomas has mastered and innovated within several disciplines, from mixed-media painting and collage to installation and photography. The exhibition shares its title and several of its themes with the pivotal text by feminist author bell hooks, in which love is an active process rooted in healing, carving a path away from domination and towards collective liberation.

Born in 1971 in Camden, New Jersey, Mickalene Thomas completed her MFA from the Yale University School of Art in 2002 and a residency at the Studio Museum in Harlem in 2003. Soon after she became well known for her large-scale acrylic paintings of Black women in states of leisure and repose using rhinestones, a central material in her practice that symbolizes the complexities of femininity. Depicting women with confident and assured expressions, the subjects of her works are often seen in domestic interiors from Black America, claiming the agency of womanhood while deconstructing the art historical canon. Similarly, Mickalene Thomas’s photographs, collages, and figurative paintings often re-stage scenes from 19th century French painters such as Henri Matisse and Édouard Manet, pushing back against the subjugation and oppressive narratives upheld by Western archives, cultural institutions, and representation systems.
“In Mickalene Thomas’s hands, collage becomes a way of thinking about love in a serious way,” said Ed Schad, Curator at The Broad. “As Thomas keeps the essence of individuals alive in her work – as the individuals are re-imagined and remade, configured from different moods and different circumstances over many years of trust and commitment – it is a love ethic she is after.”
The Broad’s debut of Mickalene Thomas: All About Love reflects some of the artist’s earliest inquiries into visual culture, sexuality, memory, and erotica and move into the present. On view will be the early photographic triptych, Lounging, Standing, Looking (2003), a piece which depicts the artist’s own mother, exploring kinship and care. These modes of intimate relations come to inform work such as Portrait of Maya No. 10 (2017) from the Broad collection. This acrylic and rhinestone work embodies Thomas’s signature ability to apply several layers of material and symbolic meaning into a single surface. At eight feet tall, the subject is empowered, sparkled, and poised, commanding her outward gaze.

The exhibition is largely populated by works at this immersive and ambitious scale, such as the twelve-foot wide I’m Feelin Good (2014) which also uses rhinestone elements. Unifying these larger-than-life subjects together in the museum’s galleries will envelop viewers into the bold and dynamic universe the artist has created, where steadfast love overcomes political strife. In addition to towering wall works, video collages such as Angelitos Negros (2016) will also be presented. This work immortalizes the late singer and actress Eartha Kitt, who sings about the absence of Black angels in art history, reflecting a core theme within the exhibition. Through her queries into pop culture and mass media, Mickalene Thomas offers a reverberating demand for Black women to be seen and understood, and for viewers to become what hooks calls “practitioners of love.”

A publication accompanies the exhibition, including Mickalene Thomas in conversation with Hayward Gallery Chief Curator, Rachel Thomas, and essays by Claudia Rankine, Darnell L. Moore, Ed Schad, Beverly Guy-Sheftall, TK Smith, and Christine Kim that cover Thomas’s distinct visual vocabulary, drawing on themes of love, intergenerational female empowerment, and tenets of Black feminist theory. 

THE BROAD
221 S. Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90012

06/10/23

Los Angeles Artists @ The Broad - Desire, Knowledge, and Hope (with Smog)

Desire, Knowledge, and Hope (with Smog)
The Broad, Los Angeles
November 18, 2023 – April 7, 2024

Patrick Martinez
Patrick Martinez 
Weeping Warrior, 2022 
Stucco, neon, mean streak, ceramic, acrylic paint, spray paint, 
latex house paint, banner tarp, rope, stucco patch, ceramic tile, 
tile adhesive, engraved mirror, and LED signs on panel. 
The Broad Art Foundation 
© Patrick Martinez

The Broad presents Desire, Knowledge, and Hope (with Smog), an exhibition drawn entirely from the Broad collection, showcasing works by Los Angeles artists. Drawing its title from a piece by John Baldessari, the exhibition often oscillates between local takes on a city in flux and turmoil, and reflections outward to evolving issues of artmaking and global concerns. The exhibition includes the work of 21 artists across varying generations who were raised in the Los Angeles area, such as Doug Aitken and Lari Pittman, or relocated to the city, including Catherine Opie and Mike Kelley. 

With artworks by Doug Aitken, John Baldessari, Mark Bradford, Robbie Conal, Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Jack Goldstein, Sayre Gomez, Mark Grotjahn, Elliott Hundley, Alex Israel, Mike Kelley, Toba Khedoori, Barbara Kruger, Sharon Lockhart, Patrick Martinez, Catherine Opie, Lari Pittman, Joe Ray, Ed Ruscha, Diana Thater, Jonas Wood.
“The Broad collection works selected for this show span five decades, and reflect Los Angeles’ growth as a nexus for artists and as a complex urban landscape to investigate,” said Joanne Heyler, Founding Director of The Broad. “The show traces the influence of earlier generations of LA-based artists on later generations and spotlights numerous artists who illuminate deep-seated social inequities and contradictions woven into our city and its myths.”
Originally the exhibition was a Spring 2020 show poised to open when the COVID-19 pandemic emerged, leaving the project unrealized. Now re-envisioned, Desire, Knowledge, and Hope (with Smog) mines the paradoxes captured in John Baldessari’s title through a more expansive, post-2020 lens featuring a wider spectrum of LA-based artists and practices in the evolving Broad collection. Including works made from 1969 to 2023 that span the mediums of abstract or photorealistic painting, photography, sculpture, and political signage, the exhibition contains fragments, attitudes, and everyday experiences absorbed and worked through in Los Angeles that reflect back on our collective present moment, and invoke alternate histories, states of mind, and futures.

The presentation highlights over 60 artworks–most of which are on view at the museum for the first time–exhibiting artists in the Broad collection whose work makes some of the city’s integral contributions to contemporary art internationally, and revealing dialogues between local artists of different generations. Even works not explicitly about Los Angeles reveal a gap between the allure and the reality of life in the city, where a sense of phantasmagoric projection contrasts against much harder, concrete realities.

The show’s title refers to John Baldessari’s monumental work Buildings=Guns=People: Desire, Knowledge, and Hope (with Smog) (1985), where “smog” nods to the city’s notorious air quality, contrasting against familiar depictions of sunshine, beaches, Hollywood, and nature. This play between an idealized expectation of LA and its gritty reality is evident in the large-scale paintings and neons of Ed Ruscha, Mark Bradford, and Patrick Martinez whose intergenerational exchanges consider global and local societal issues through a shared home.

Hung alongside John Baldessari’s work are two pieces by Mike Kelley, notably including his six-part drawing Infinite Expansion (1984), which is connected with one of his earliest performance works exploring psychedelia at The Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles. Other featured artists include Barbara Kruger, who have a gallery dedicated to her work Untitled (I shop therefore I am) (1987-2019). On view at The Broad for the first time, this work uses the parlance of political signage to probe commerce and the formation of identity. Toba Khedoori presents large-scale paper works Untitled (park benches) (1997) and Untitled (Black fireplace) (2006), both of which depict scenes of quietude or isolation, experiences often associated with the sprawling geography of Los Angeles. In two works from 2022, Diamonds and Pearls and The Whole Wide World is a Haunted House, Sayre Gomez deploys a realist style using airbrushed paint. Both of his works take on the overlooked perspective of the pedestrian, where street-level views of an abandoned strip mall and nail salon signage unambiguously embrace the complex social arrangements of a shared, sweeping metropolis.

Furthermore, on view for free in The Broad’s third-floor galleries throughout the exhibition are works by additional Los Angeles artists in the Broad collection including Charles Ray, Henry Taylor, and Robert Therrien.

THE BROAD
221 S. Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90012

22/04/23

Keith Haring: Art is for Everybody @ The Broad, Los Angeles + Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto + Walker Art Center, Minneapolis

Keith Haring: Art is for Everybody
The Broad, Los Angeles
May 27 – October 8, 2023

Keith Haring
KEITH HARING
Untitled, 1982 
Baked enamel on steel, 43 x 43 inches, 
The Eli and Edythe L. Broad Collection, Los Angeles
© Keith Haring Foundation

Keith Haring
KEITH HARING
Red Room, 1988
Acrylic on canvas, 96 x 179 in. (243.8 x 454.7 cm) 
The Broad Art Foundation 
© Keith Haring Foundation

The Broad presents a special exhibition Keith Haring: Art is for Everybody. Organized by The Broad, this show is the first ever museum exhibition in Los Angeles to present Keith Haring’s expansive body of work and will feature over 120 artworks and archival materials. Known for his use of vibrant color, energetic linework and iconic characters like the barking dog and the radiant baby, Keith Haring’s work continues to dissolve barriers between art and life and spread joy, all while being rooted in the creative spirit and mission of his subway drawings and renowned public murals: art is for everybody.

Following its debut in Los Angeles, Keith Haring: Art Is for Everybody will travel to the Art Gallery of Ontario, in Toronto, from November 11, 2023 to March 17, 2024, and then to the Walker Art Center, in Minneapolis, from April 27 to September 8, 2024.

Born in 1958 in Reading, Pennsylvania, Keith Haring moved to New York City in 1978 to study art. He quickly became a staple within the downtown New York arts community with the likes of artists Jean-Michel Basquiat, Kenny Scharf and Andy Warhol. Keith Haring’s output in the coming decade can be understood in the spirit of the countercultural and nightlife scenes of the 1980s, often organizing exhibitions at the Club 57 nightclub and other alternative venues. This sensibility is palpable in his subway drawings–of which he created over 5,000 throughout his career–where his visionary use of line could be experimented with in quick movements, available to the wide public who took the New York subway. Eli and Edythe Broad, who first began to collect contemporary art deeply in the 1980s, were drawn to the social and political nature of Keith Haring’s work early on, first entering the collection in 1982. Forty years later his legacy continues to garner international acclaim and recognition.
“Keith Haring’s global influence and enduring impact are profound, and The Broad is thrilled to bring our audience in Los Angeles this sweeping exhibition of his work,” said Joanne Heyler, Founding Director of The Broad. “It is our distinct pleasure to share a deep and varied representation of his emblematic visual language and to highlight the prolific ways he spoke through his art and activism about social issues while celebrating joy, solidarity, community and hope.”
Keith Haring: Art is for Everybody explores both his artistic practice and life, with much of the source material for the exhibition coming from his personal journals. Works presented span from the late-1970s when he was a student at the School of Visual Arts in New York up until 1988, just two years before the artist died from AIDS-related illness at the age of 31. Keith Haring’s participation in nuclear disarmament and anti-Apartheid movements are featured prominently in the show, as well as works that take on complex issues that remain crucial today from environmentalism, capitalism, and the proliferation of new technologies to religion, sexuality, and race. In the last gallery, significant works from the late 1980s is accompanied by framed posters illustrating the artist’s activism within the HIV/AIDS crisis. 

The exhibition is accompanied by a monograph catalog published by the museum in collaboration with DelMonico Books and features essays by The Broad’s Curator and Exhibitions Manager Sarah Loyer, Kimberly Drew and Tom Finkelpearl; a roundtable conversation with Patti Astor, Kenny Scharf, and Kermit Oswald; and reflections by George Condo, Ann Magnuson, Bill T Jones, Julia Gruen and Gil Vazquez.
“Keith Haring’s belief that art should be accessible to all is central to the exhibition and integral to The Broad’s mission,” said Sarah Loyer, Curator and Exhibitions Manager. “With this exhibition, our audience will have the opportunity to dive deep into Haring’s work, both as an artist and as an innovator who completely shifted the landscape of contemporary art to this day.”
Divided into ten galleries in total, the expansive exhibition will feature the breadth of mediums Keith Haring worked within, including video, sculpture, drawing, painting, and graphic works, as well as representations from the artist’s enormous output of public projects, from the subway drawings to his public murals. Major works held in the Broad collection such as Untitled, 1984 and Red Room, 1988 will be on view in addition to key loans from many institutional and private collections, including art, ephemera and documentation provided by the Keith Haring Foundation in New York, established by the artist in 1989. The show features immersive elements, such as a gallery lit by blacklight soundtracked by playlists created by the artist himself. Additionally, the Shop at The Broad will be transformed, taking inspiration from Keith Haring’s artistic retail space The Pop Shop, which first opened in 1986 in the SoHo neighborhood of New York. Much like its original format, The Broad uses this component of the exhibition to make Keith Haring’s line accessible to the widest possible audience.
“Much like the work of Keith Haring, his idea that Art Is for Everybody is as profound in its simplicity as it is in its complexity. We invite everyone to The Broad museum for a closer look at why his practice, activism, courage, and accessibility continue to resonate, perhaps now more than ever,” said Gil Vazquez, Executive Director of the Keith Haring Foundation.
Additionally on view for free in The Broad’s third-floor galleries throughout the exhibition will be works by contemporaries of Keith Haring including Jean-Michel Basquiat, George Condo, Jenny Holzer, Kenny Scharf, and Andy Warhol, among others.

THE BROAD
221 S. Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90012

18/11/22

William Kentridge @ The Broad, Los Angeles - William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows - Exhibition + Catalogue

William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows
The Broad, Los Angeles
November 12, 2022 - April 9, 2023

William Kentridge
William Kentridge
And When He Returned, 2019
Hand-woven mohair tapestry 
118 x 187 in. (300 x 475 cm) 
Collection of the Artist
© William Kentridge

William Kentridge
William Kentridge
The Shrapnel in the Woods, 2013
India ink on Crabb's Universal Technological Dictionary 1826
82 5/8 x 86 5/8 in. (210 x 220 cm)
© William Kentridge

The Broad presents landmark exhibition William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows surveying 35 years of the celebrated South African artist's work.

Born in Johannesburg in 1955 and living there his entire life, William Kentridge has dedicated much of his five-decade-long career to creating works that explore the social and political conditions of his home country’s transition from Apartheid to democracy. Spanning his well-known charcoal drawings and animated films to prints, bronze sculptures, tapestries, and theater models, the exhibition uses the paradoxes of light and shadow to directly engage with the aftermath of colonialism, the recording and memory of historical narratives, and how the artist’s studio can disrupt the certainties of long-held belief systems. The exhibition coincides with the release of a catalogue published by the museum in collaboration with DelMonico Books and will feature essays and interviews by William Kentridge, Ann McCoy, Zakes Mda, Walter Murch, and The Broad’s Curator Ed Schad.

“For decades, William Kentridge has looked at history–who writes it, what gets recorded by it, and what about it allocates power inside of societies–with an eye towards de-centering and unsettling what we think we know,” said The Broad Founding Director Joanne Heyler. “His viewpoint comes from the important and vital story of South Africa’s struggle for democracy, and it is a viewpoint that is able to look out at the wider world in an effort to show how fragile and ongoing that struggle remains.”

“The work of William Kentridge is a celebration of making, grounded in the cultural fabric of Johannesburg,” said The Broad Curator Ed Schad. “One encounters South African voices and histories, which are turned outwards to look at the wider world. In Kentridge’s collaborations, one feels the richness and energy of a workshop spirt which is defined by openness to unusual ideas, off-kilter points of view, and material disruptions which upends what we think we know.”

For the presentation in Los Angeles, all 18 works from the Broad collection join substantial loans from across the United States and South Africa. Organized both thematically and chronologically throughout the museum’s first-floor galleries, a highlight of the exhibition is The Broad collection’s 30-minute five-channel video installation The Refusal of Time (2012). One of Kentridge’s most celebrated, complex, and immersive works, incorporating elements of sound, sculpture, and moving image, The Refusal of Time is a rich contemplation on colonization and the standardization of time imposed by European interests on the rest of the world. At the core of the installation is a breathing machine the artist refers to as the “elephant” with rhythmic moving bellows, referencing the Dickens’ novel Hard Times, in which machines move “like the head of an elephant in a state of melancholy madness.”

In addition to key drawings, sculptures, prints, and tapestries, the artist’s 11 Drawings for Projection films are on view, as well as a series of films that reflect on early cinema, including 7 Fragments for Georges Méliès, Day for Night, and Journey to the Moon (all 2003), a suite of nine short films that prominently feature the artist himself and celebrate the artist’s studio as a site of experimentation and associative play. Many recent drawings will be shown that were created for his monumental performance project The Head & the Load (2018), which unearth the neglected histories of Africans and Africa in World War I. Earlier works such as Art in a State of Grace, Art in a State of Hope, Art in a State of Siege (all 1988), and early films like Monument (1990) and Mine (1991), show Kentridge’s long-lasting political engagement, upholding artistry and the creative act as its own form of transformative knowledge.

Surveying 35 years of the celebrated South African artist’s practice, William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows features more than 130 works in an engaging and interactive design by Belgian designer Sabine Theunissen. Originated by The Broad, the exhibition will be traveling to Museum of Fine Arts, Houston in 2023.

William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows
William Kentridge: In Praise of Shadows
Clothbound Hardcover
10.5"H x 8.25"W - 288 Pages
© William Kentridge
The exhibition is accompanied by a monograph catalogue, published by The Broad in collaboration with Delmonico Books. The 288-page, book features William Kentridge’s well-known Drawings for Projection films, early prints, drawings, and sculptures, as well as major bodies of work made after 2012–including the monumental installation The Refusal of Time (2012)–which serve as an extended meditation on Kentridge’s studio practice. The volume is organized chronologically and thematically, starting with William Kentridge’s artistic beginnings in the 1970s and 1980s, leading into his destabilization of South African and global narratives through an openness to uncertainty, the generative power of the artist’s studio, and perpetual change, all as conditions for illuminating repressed and silenced voices in historical records. An essay by The Broad Curator Ed Schad is presented along with illustrations and analysis of William Kentridge’s work, joining essays by artist and writer Ann McCoy and renowned novelist and thinker Zakes Mda. Notably, the volume includes conversations between Kentridge with revolutionary film and sound editor Walter Murch. The catalogue is available at The Shop at The Broad and online for $65.
THE BROAD
221 S. Grand Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90012