BOSTON, MASS.- For the installation on the
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museums Anne H. Fitzpatrick Façade, the Museums Artist-in-Residence, Boston-based artist Steve Locke, created Three Deliberate Grays for Freddie (A Memorial for Freddie Gray) as a statement about the issues of race and violence in America today.
Locke painted an abstract portrait of Gray, a Black American man, whose untimely death after being in Baltimore police custody in 2015 aggravated long standing racial tensions in the city and sparked street protests, police clashes and violence.
For the façade installation, Locke generated three distinct monochromes by averaging the pixels of three individual photos of Gray that were frequently in the media. One is a family photo; one is from his arrest; and one is an image of Gray in the hospital on life support. The resulting colors form a time line of the life, suffering, and death of Freddie Gray.
Born in Cleveland and raised in Detroit, Lockes solo work has been exhibited at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; the Museum of Contemporary Art Detroit; Mendes Wood in Sao Paulo, Brazil; and VOLTA 5 in Basel, Switzerland. His work has also been shown in New York, Pennsylvania, Savannah, Seattle, and Beijing. He is an associate professor at the Massachusetts College of Art and Design (Mass Art) and was appointed a visiting associate professor in painting at Yale University in 2014. He has a bachelors of science degree from Boston University and bachelors and masters degrees in art from Mass Art.
Locke spent a month living and working at the Gardner Museum as an Artist-in-Residence in 2016, and he is the 12th artist to create a work for this public art space in the Museum. He will discuss Three Deliberate Grays for Freddie (A Memorial for Freddie Gray) on Thursday, Sept. 13 at 5:15 p.m. in the Museums Living Room. The program is free with Museum admission but space is limited.