Skirball exhibition puts Trenton Doyle Hancock and Philip Guston in dialogue
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Skirball exhibition puts Trenton Doyle Hancock and Philip Guston in dialogue
Trenton Doyle Hancock, Step and Screw: The Star of Code Switching, 2020, acrylic, synthetic fur, graphite, plastic bottle caps, and paper collage on canvas, 84 × 84 in. (213.4 × 213.4 cm). The Jewish Museum, New York, Purchase: Arts Acquisition Committee Fund.



LOS ANGELES, CA.- Draw Them In, Paint Them Out presents the work of painter Philip Guston (American, b. Canada 1913–1980), the child of Jewish immigrants from Odessa (present-day Ukraine), and Trenton Doyle Hancock (American, b. 1974), a leading Black contemporary artist based in Houston, Texas, in dialogue for the first time. The exhibition explores resonant connections between their work and the role that artists play in the pursuit of social justice.

Draw Them In, Paint Them Out features key works by Guston, including his now-iconic, late satirical Ku Klux Klan paintings, in dialogue with major works Hancock created in response to his inspirational mentor, highlighting their parallel thematic explorations of the nature of evil, self-representation, otherness, and art activism. Foregrounding works that depict the Klan, the exhibition demonstrates how both artists engage with and at times even inhabit these hateful figures to explore their own identities and more broadly examine systems of institutionalized power and their feelings of complicity within them. Yet, despite the difficult subject matter and at times violent imagery presented in their work, both Hancock and Guston share an ability to conquer the pain and emotion of their art through humor that is both dark and undeniable, engaging with their shared embrace of the visual language of comics.

“As a Jewish American institution that harnesses the power of the arts to connect people across communities and generations, the Skirball is proud to present the work of two extraordinary artists in conversation,” stated Sheri Bernstein, Museum Director of the Skirball Cultural Center. “That Trenton Doyle Hancock felt a kinship with and drew inspiration from Philip Guston—from his visual language, embrace of satire, and nuanced and layered understanding of his own identity—should give us hope during these polarizing times in our own ability to see ourselves in others who might on the surface seem different from us.”

Organized by The Jewish Museum, New York, the exhibition is curated by Rebecca Shaykin, Curator, in partnership with Trenton Doyle Hancock. The Skirball Cultural Center's presentation is coordinated by Vicki Phung Smith, Curator.

Philip Guston, whose early social realist and abstract work evolved into an idiosyncratic form of social satire, is now one of the most revered painters of the twentieth century. Born Phillip Goldstein in 1913 in Montreal, Canada to Ukrainian-Jewish immigrant parents. He grew up in California, where he attended the Los Angeles Manual Arts High School and the Otis Art Institute briefly. Largely self-taught, he found early success painting murals in the WPA, a Depression-era government program that commissioned American artists to create murals in public buildings. Guston’s early figurative murals were inspired by the work of Italian Renaissance masters and Mexican muralists. Early acclaim as a figurative painter and years spent teaching in the mid-West were followed by a Prix de Rome in 1948-49, after which he moved permanently to New York and turned to abstraction, joining contemporaries Jackson Pollock, Willem De Kooning, and Mark Rothko. In the mid-1960s, Guston withdrew from the New York art scene to Woodstock, NY where he worked on his late figurative paintings featuring hooded Klansmen for which he is now best known. He passed away in 1980 in Woodstock, weeks after the opening of a major retrospective at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco that traveled to the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.; Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago; Denver Art Museum, Denver; and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. Today, Guston’s works can be found in the collections of Centre National d’art et de Culture Georges Pompidou, Paris; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles; Museum of Modern Art, New York; among others.

Trenton Doyle Hancock was born in 1974 in Oklahoma City, OK. Raised in Paris, Texas, Hancock earned his BFA from Texas A&M University, Commerce, and his MFA from the Tyler School of Art at Temple University, Philadelphia. For almost two decades, Trenton Doyle Hancock has been constructing his own fantastical narrative that continues to develop and inform his prolific artistic output. Part fictional, part autobiographical, Hancock’s work pulls from his own personal experience, the art historical canon, comics and superheroes, pulp fiction, and myriad other pop culture references, resulting in a complex amalgamation of characters and plots possessing universal concepts of light and dark, good and evil, and all the grey in between. Hancock’s work is in the permanent collections of institutions including the Menil Collection, Houston; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Studio Museum in Harlem, New York; and Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; among others.










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