MINNEAPOLIS, MN.- Theaster Gatess (US, b. 1973) multifaceted practice includes sculpture, installation, performance, and architectural interventions. An important aspect of his work entails reclaiming and revitalizing abandoned buildings in neighborhoods across Chicagos South Side. These spaces, called Dorchester Projects and the Stony Island Arts Bank, have become catalysts for creative and cultural gatherings, and now serve as repositories for thousands of objects. Taking things that have been cast aside from libraries, archives, and collections, the artist asks us to consider what it means to invest objects with new meanings through the simple acts of conversation, conservation, creation, and care.
This exhibition brings a number of Gatess collections into a museum context for the first time. The Walkers galleries will be transformed into a Gesamtkunstwerk, or total work of art, which transposes the artists vast collections and studio environment into four immersive rooms, each infused with his poetic interventions. Included are selections from 60,000 slides of art/architectural history from the University of Chicago Glass Lantern Slides Collection; 15,000 books and periodicals, furniture, and other ephemera from the Johnson Publishing Company Archives & Collections; 4,000 objects from the Edward J. Williams Collection of Negrobilia; and ceramic pots and other wares that the artist has made or collected over the past decade. Taken together, the objects on view speak to what Gates calls the truth of the everyday and demonstrate his deep belief in the objects and histories of African American material culture.
In 2017 Gates unveiled his first permanent outdoor commission Black Vessel for a Saint (2017) in the Minneapolis Sculpture Garden. Composed of custommade black bricks, the temple-like structure provides a home for a salvaged statue of Saint Laurence, the patron saint of librarians and archivists.
Theaster Gates: Assembly Hall is on view September 5, 2019January 12, 2020 in the Target Gallery.
Curated by Victoria Sung, Assistant Curator, Visual Arts, with William Hernández Luege, Curatorial Fellow, Visual Arts