LONG ISLAND CITY, NY.- Socrates Sculpture Park is presenting New Yorks first institutional solo exhibition of Nari Ward (b. Jamaica; lives in New York). The exhibition, Nari Ward: G.O.A.T., again , features a series of six newly commissioned outdoor artworks that are being created on site and on view April 29 September 4, 2017.
Ward recasts tropes of outdoor structures the monument, the playground, lawn ornaments, architectural barriers, and the advertising sign into surreal and playful creations. Nari Ward: G.O.A.T., again examines how hubris creates misplaced expectations in American cultural politics. This exhibition also brings new insight into the artists exploration of identity, social progress, the urban environment, and group belonging.
G.O.A.T. is an acronym for Greatest of All Time, a phrase commonly used in American sports, made famous by Muhammad Ali, and in hip-hop, most notably, as the title of Queens native LL Cool Js best-selling album. The title alludes to the African-American experience and political theater common themes in Wards work. The figure of the goat features prominently in Wards articulation of social dynamics, conjuring the animals attributes and symbolic connotations, from an ambitious climber of great heights to an outcast.
Nari Ward: G.O.A.T., again spans Socrates Sculpture Parks five-acre landscape as the Parks first presentation of a single artist in its 30-year history.
Ward, who transforms discarded or familiar materials into formal innovations that address societys most urgent questions, underscores the Parks mission of integrating contemporary art into daily life and as a space for cultural exchange and transformation.
By presenting Wards outdoor works in an open, public environment like Socrates, we hope to elicit conversation about emotional, economic, and political subjects compelling to a broad spectrum of people, said John Hatfield, Executive Director of Socrates Sculpture Park. Public art is often experienced as an individual work, but this constellation of new works, each in dialogue with one another, allows the public to participate in a single artist's vision.
Amidst current national and global debates regarding immigration and race, and set in the context of the most diverse county in the United States Queens, New York Nari Ward: G.O.A.T., again will contribute to the dialogue surrounding our increasingly stratified society, said Jess Wilcox, Director of Exhibitions at Socrates.
Nari Ward: G.O.A.T., again is organized by Socrates Sculpture Park and curated by Jess Wilcox, Director of Exhibitions.