MIAMI, FLA.- The Institute of Contemporary Art, Miami is presenting the countrys first solo exhibition by rising American artist Sondra Perry. Featuring work recently shown at Serpentine Gallery in London in a completely new exhibition design for ICA Miami, Typhoon Coming On explores Perrys use ofvideo, media, installation and performance to create powerful narratives that explore the intersection of black identity, digital culture and power. The exhibition opened this summer at ICA Miami on July 13.
Perry creates work about blackness, black femininity and African American heritage. Through her use of digital tools and platformsfrom blue-screen technology and 3D avatars to found footage from the Internether works reflect on the ways digital technology can shape identity and representation. Net neutrality and principles of open access are key to Perrys practice. Promoting ideas of collective production and action, she uses open source software to edit her work and leases it digitally for use in galleries and classrooms, while also making all her videos available for free online. As viral imagery of black deaths in the US are sensationalized, Perry aims to use this digital space to privilege black life, to democratize access to art and culture, and to offer a critical platform offering alternative narratives to the portrayal of blackness in mainstream media. Perry has said: Im interested in thinking about how blackness shifts, morphs, and embodies technology to combat oppression and surveillance throughout the diaspora. Black is agile.
Sondra Perry's innovative work vividly explores some of the most imminent topics of our time, using digital media and technology to reflect upon themes in black identity, power and culture, said Alex Gartenfeld, Artistic Director of ICA Miami. Presenting the worlds most innovative talents and fostering the exchange of art and ideas is at the core of ICA Miamis mission.
The title work Typhoon coming on, 2018, is an immersive large-scale video and sound installation visually referencing the J.M.W. Turner painting The Slave Ship, 1840. The exhibition will also include examples of Perrys innovative approach to sculpture, such as Graft and Ash for a Three-Monitor Workstation (2016), an interactive exercise machine mounted with monitors displaying renderings of the artists 3-D avatar as she questions the current productivity and efficiency culture. Featured in the exhibition are additional sculptures as well as the video installation TK (Suspicious Glorious Absence), 2018, featuring Perrys iconic Chroma key blue walls along a large video projection of an extreme close-up of the artists skin. The accompanying video shown in the installation combines found footage of the artists family, protests and body cams .
Curated for the Serpentine Galleries by Hans Ulrich Obrist, Artistic Director, and Amira Gad, Curator, at ICA Miami, the exhibition is realized by Alex Gartenfeld, Artistic Director, and Stephanie Seidel, Associate Curator, and includes newly organized immersive experiences.