BERKELEY, CA.- The UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive has commissioned a site-specific mural from the Chicago-based artist Caroline Kent, which will occupy the museums entry space through October 30. Kents massive abstract mural The Sounds Among Us will fill the entirety of BAMPFAs Art Wall, a 30-by-63-foot space that is dedicated to presenting large-scale work by leading contemporary artists. The mural marks Kents first major site-specific installation in a West Coast museum and is the largest work that the artist has completed to date.
Described by Kent as a musical notation for everyday sounds, the Art Wall installation invites visitors to experience the work as a visual accompaniment to the nuanced soundscape of footsteps, conversation, and street noise that intermingle throughout BAMPFAs Crane Forum on a daily basis. Shadowed forms pass through veiled layers of black ground, never fully reaching the surface. The colorful geometric shapes that emerge hint at recognizable forms that skirt the edges of representation. These shapes are arranged to evoke a sense of rhythmic interplay, guiding the spectators eye in a variegated zigzag across the wall, interspersed with short poetic phrases like ...and should my words come back to me in another form from the deep
. These inclusions mark the first time that Kent has incorporated text into her colorful abstract paintings with black backgrounds.
The Sounds Among Us features a notable break from Kents past work enabled by the monumental size of the piece: the murals base layer comprises a conglomeration of shapes in varying tones of black, which subtly interweave to add a new dimension of texture that deepens with proximity to the work. The mural is also unusual for Kents practice in its horizontal, rather than vertical, orientation, offering viewers an expanded horizon that calls to mind the visual layout of musical notes on a stanza.
One of the few Black Latinx artists working in contemporary abstract painting, Kent has described her work to the New York Times Style Magazine as confronting an abstract art canon that is almost void of Black and brown voices. Based in Chicago since 2017, Kent has exhibited at numerous galleries and museums in the Midwest and New York City, including at the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago where an immersive installation of her work is currently on view through June 12. Her works are held in the collections of the Art Institute of Chicago, DePaul Art Museum, and Walker Art Center, as well as the collection of BAMPFAwhich recently acquired a painting by Kent at the recommendation of David Huffman, one of four artist-curators of the museums current exhibition The Artists Eye, who selected Kents A State of Suspension (2018) for inclusion in his curated selection.
In conjunction with Kents Art Wall presentation, BAMPFA will host a workshop for families on Saturday, June 11 at 11:30 a.m. led by the artist Marcela Florez, which will invite participants to create their own sound pictures inspired by the architectural features of BAMPFAs building. BAMPFA has also commissioned an essay on Kents work by the Chicago-based writer Camille Bacon, which is available in printed form in the Crane Forum and as a PDF on the museums website. A video interview with Kent conducted by BAMPFA Director Julie Rodrigues Widholm will be posted online in the coming days; visit bampfa.org for the latest updates.
Its important for museums to offer artists opportunities that push and stretch their work in new directions and BAMPFAs Art Wall is an exciting space for this, said Widholm, who curated the exhibition with assistance from BAMPFA Chief Curator Christina Yang. Im thrilled to introduce Carolines work to Bay Area audiences. Its simultaneously beautiful, conceptual, and critical in its approach to abstract painting with allusions to sound, music composition, and film set against a multilayered black ground. Her work rigorously enhances our ongoing exploration of the legacy of abstract painting at BAMPFA.