Cameron Spratley's solo exhibition at von ammon tackles Confederate symbolism in DC debut
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Cameron Spratley's solo exhibition at von ammon tackles Confederate symbolism in DC debut
The exhibition is concerned mostly with a suite of new paintings, the common subject of which is a gray-clad Confederate soldier, the erstwhile mascot of South Willoughby High in Charlottesville VA.



WASHINGTON, DC.- von ammon is presenting a solo show by Chicago-based artist Cameron Spratley (b. 1994, Manassas VA). A native of the DC metro area, this is Spratley’s first solo exhibition in the nation’s capital and his first appearance at von ammon.


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The exhibition is concerned mostly with a suite of new paintings, the common subject of which is a gray-clad Confederate soldier, the erstwhile mascot of South Willoughby High in Charlottesville VA. Following the Unite the Right rally in 2016, the school district’s superintendent ordered the mothballing of the mascot, while dubiously allowing the school to preserve the name Rebel for its sports teams.

Spratley’s practice draws the art of bricolage far away from the 20th century salon, imbuing the medium with the rageful disorder of the kidnapper-for-ransom or the asylum inmate. This is a collage emanating from a distinctly American sensibility borne of deranged, insoluble ideologies. Having conjured this recently-scuttled Southern icon, Spratley proceeds to distort the image into a pudgy, inglorious caricature. Further humiliations abound: some of the soldiers don the honk-nose of a clown; others deign to be cased in miscegenated two-tone skin. Nevertheless, the Rebel is figured predominantly in this exhibition, like a bad romantic partner that just won’t stop showing up. For this artist——and the school superintendent——it seems to be difficult to seal the door on a folk tradition of gleeful exploitation and zealously-wrought treason.


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Hundreds of collaged bullethole decals riddle each painting, and spill out copiously onto the gallery walls. A simplistic explanation of this painterly act of mass-violence would have something to do with the death-by-firing-squad of the Rebel icon, as some final coup-de-grace of National closure. Of course not. The stellate, cartoony bullet decal has little to do with the solemnity of gun violence, but rather with a rageful exuberance around gunfire and the mirthful chaos it sows: the road sign embossed with bulletholes commemorates some catharsis——perhaps even a high school graduation.

The utter insolubility of American folk ideology finds ample opportunities to take shape in Spratley’s compositional derangements, which force a belief into the same space as its counter-belief. This tendency shares form with the city hosting the exhibition: concurrent with Spratley’s exhibition is the inauguration of The Executive Branch, a private members-only club for the American Right ensconced in the liberal stronghold of Georgetown, and across the street from this gallery.










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