MILWAUKEE, WIS.- Hail We Now Sing Joy, on view at the
Milwaukee Art Museum June 23September 17, shows new paintings and sculptures from Chicago-born artist Rashid Johnson. The exhibition features 14 large-scale works that fill the Museums entire feature exhibition space. Using his signature materials of white ceramic tile, red oak flooring, shea butter, black soap, and wax, Johnson examines themes of race, history, yearning, anxiety, and escape and investigates the relationship between art, society, and personal identity.
Rashid Johnsons work is on everyones radar right now as he tackles contemporary issues, including the complexities of living as a black American, that are especially important in todays political and cultural climate, said Margaret Andera, the Museums curator of contemporary art. Hail We Now Sing Joy gives visitors the unique opportunity to see a significant body of work from one of the current generations most celebrated artists.
Antoines Organ, the largest of the artists architectural grid installations ever shown in the United States at over 10 feet tall, is the first work Museum visitors will encounter. The monumental lattice of black scaffolding is filled with signifying objects, including books, televisions showing Johnsons older video work, live plants and mounds of shea butter, which fill the space with a pleasant and recognizable aroma. Within this environment inspired by the African diaspora is an upright piano that musicians will play at scheduled times throughout the exhibitions run.
Three series comprise the rest of the exhibition, including Anxious Audience, large-scale panels of white ceramic tile coveredexcept for a few curiously empty spaceswith dozens of agitated faces scrawled in black soap and wax. In the new Falling Men series, inverted figures fall through the air; they recall the pixelated animations from video games that Johnson played as a youth and can be interpreted as flying heroes or as chalk outlines from crime scenes. Lastly, the Escape Collage paintings consist of large-scale vinyl images of lush tropical environments atop a modernist tile surface. For Johnson, when he was a child in Chicago, the image of a palm tree invited daydreams about success and manhood: As a kid I remember thinking that if you could actually live in a place with palm trees, if you could get away from the city and the cold, that meant youd definitely made it. The collages are some of Johnsons most complexly layered works and introduce an expanded palette to his practice.
Informing all of Johnsons work, including the materials he uses, from shea butter and black soap to the books in Antoines Organ (Paul Beattys The Sellout, Deborah Dickersons The End of Blackness, and Richard Wrights Native Son), is Afrocentrism and the artist's own experience as a black man in America. Johnson was represented in the 30 Americans exhibition at the Milwaukee Art Museum in 2013.
Rashid Johnson: Hail We Now Sing Joy travels to the Milwaukee Art Museum from the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art in Kansas City.