Public Art Fund debuts Clifford Prince King's autobiographical photo series, capturing queer black companionship
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, December 22, 2024


Public Art Fund debuts Clifford Prince King's autobiographical photo series, capturing queer black companionship
the fear of letting go, 2023. Archival inkjet print. Courtesy the artist; STARS Gallery, Los Angeles; and Gordon Robichaux, New York Presented by Public Art Fund as a part of Clifford Prince King: Let me know when you get home, an exhibition on 300 JCDecaux bus shelters and 30 newsstands throughout New York City, Chicago, and Boston, February 21–May 26, 2024.



NEW YORK, NY.- Opening today, publicartfund.org presents Clifford Prince King’s series of 13 new photographs, Let me know when you get home. This tender autobiographical series is being displayed on 330 JCDecaux bus shelters and newsstands across New York, Chicago, and Boston. For his first public art exhibition, King photographed the people and places he encountered during travels in the summer of 2023. An extension of his autobiographical practice, Let me know when you get home serves as a photo diary of King’s time in artist residencies at BOFFO on Fire Island, Light Work in Syracuse, and 8th House in Vermont, as well as travels throughout São Paulo and the Cayman Islands. During this period of transience, King sought to capture his sources of comfort, companionship, and love. The resulting series explores nature, intimacy, the act of claiming space, and the significance of creating a home.

“Let me know when you get home marks a nomadic period in the artist’s life when the people that surrounded him temporarily became his home. The series serves as a visual journey tracing King’s summer travels, cumulatively revealing a meditative self-portrait,” said Public Art Fund Adjunct Curator Katerina Stathopoulou. “Presented larger-than-life on hundreds of JCDecaux bus shelters and newsstands, King’s arresting portraits gaze directly at the viewer, diminishing the space between audience and subject.”

Based in New York, Clifford Prince King is a self-taught photographer who documents his relationships and experiences as a queer Black man, recording his life and the ways it is shaped by the people that surround him. Growing up in Arizona, King seldom saw his own identity reflected in images or popular films. A desire for representation led him to begin creating deeply personal images that extend an invitation to diverse audiences similarly seeking a sense of belonging, community, and safety.

“This series of works came about during a time in my life when the people, places, and pieces organically fell together to form a new sense of home. Displayed on public bus shelters and newsstands throughout the winter time, these photographs offer a breath of fresh air, surrender, and release, providing diverse audience members with warmth, tenderness, and an encouragement to embrace and heal from the past,” said King.

King’s photographs capture poignant moments of desire, closeness, and self-realization unfolding in lush natural environments and interior domestic spaces. At once ambiguous and narrative, the photographs take on a cinematic quality, evoking questions of what took place leading up to the image and what will come to pass. Using a 35mm film camera to lend the work a timeless, grainy quality, King bathes his subjects in the warm natural light of summer, capturing them in gentle poses of vulnerability, affection, and contemplation. Among the images unfurling the drama and warmth of relationships are a capoeira dancer caught mid-handstand on a rooftop in São Paolo, a couple standing closely together by the waterfront in the rain, and two lovers kissing while handcuffed off the side of a road, illuminated by car headlights.

The series title, Let me know when you get home, evokes layers of meaning surrounding experiences of affection and shelter. The phrase is an expression of care and concern for loved ones within spaces where safety isn’t guaranteed for members of LGTBQ+ and BIPOC communities. Additionally, it alludes to the exhibition’s presentation on bus shelters, sites for people commuting to and from their residences. Finally, the title also expresses the journey and desire to find a sense of belonging during transient and unmoored life stages.

Exploring companionship and selfhood, King’s six-foot portraits stand as pillars of LGTBQ+ and BIPOC communities, in scenes rich with poetry, release, and contemplation. With this new body of work, King strives to carve out space for people like himself in the city streets, making his subjects unapologetically visible.

Clifford Prince King (b. 1993, Tucson, Arizona) lives and works in New York City. A self-taught photographer and filmmaker, King documents his personal relationships in traditional, everyday settings that speak on his experiences as a Queer Black man. King takes photos of friends, lovers, and acquaintances, many of whom have significant connections to the sites where they are pictured.

King’s recent solo exhibitions include Hush-a-bye Dreams, Gordon Robichaux, New York, NY (2023); Yesterday and Beyond, Carolyn Campagna Kleefeld Contemporary Art Museum, Long Beach, CA (2023); RASPBERRY BLOW, Stars Gallery, Los Angeles, CA (2022); We Used to Lay Together, Light Work, Syracuse, NY (2021); Where Beauty Softens Your Grief, No Moon, Los Angeles (2021), CA. King’s photographs are in the public collections of the Hammer Museum, Kleefeld Contemporary Art Museum, Los Angeles County Museum of Arts, ICA Miami, Minneapolis Institute of Art, and Studio Museum in Harlem.

Clifford Prince King: Let me know when you get home
February 21–May 26, 2024
JCDecaux Bus Shelters and Newsstands
Citywide throughout New York, Chicago, and Boston










Today's News

February 21, 2024

The Met aims to get Harlem right, the second time around

'Oppenheimer' sweeps the BAFTAs with 7 awards including best film

'Beatrice Caracciolo: The Parable of the Blind' opened at Paula Cooper Gallery on February 17th

"Street Art" power invades Julien's featuring works from Banksy, Invader, RETNA and Jamie Reid

Centenary of the birth of Antoni Tàpies celebrated by Museo Reina Sofía and Fundació Antoni Tapies

Artist Elene Chantladze subject of dual exhibitions at Kaufmann repetto and Anton Kern Gallery in New York

First solo exhibition in the United States dedicated to Swiss artist Verena Loewensberg now at Hauser & Wirth

Benton Museum of Art announces appointment of Solveig Nelson as curator of photography and new media

East Van's gritty 1970's gang era with immersive, subversive world premiere of 'Sunrise Betties'

Vincent van Gogh's 1st painting to depict outdoors and two seminal paintings by Andrew Wyeth at Currier Museum

World Chess Hall of Fame showing 'Donna Dodson: Match of the Matriarchs and other Amazonomachies'

Princeton University Library presents largest U.S. retrospective of the work of Ulises Carrión to date

Can the Olympics rejuvenate one of France's poorest corners?

Quietly dressing Hollywood's cool girls

The twilight of the American sommelier

Song-Word Art House announces 'Echoes Of The Flame' to celebrate music and lyrics of James Brown

100 years of surrealism commemorated by the Belgian Presidency of the Council of the EU at Bozar

National Gallery presents new performance celebrating architecture of Colin Madigan

American Masters Shorts launches with 'Searching for Augusta Savage' in honor of Black History Month

Knoxville Museum of Art receives $3 million contribution to endow executive director position

'Sky Hopinka: Subterranean Ceremonies' is now on view at FRYE Art Museum

Public Art Fund debuts Clifford Prince King's autobiographical photo series, capturing queer black companionship

Emily Sano to retire after four decades as a curator, director and advocate for Asian art

Discover the Magic of Arkfeld Pro: The Dragon Engraving Edition Unveiled

How Hetal Vyas Turned a Simple Idea into a Well-Oiled Machine

Renowned filmmaker Jie Deng and editor Jingting Yang's Collaborative Creation: "Hindi Mama"

Crafting Your Artistic Resume: Tips for Emerging Artists




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
(52 8110667640)

Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful