“I’m elegant but I have this little rough edge.”
Mark Bradford
Mark Bradford
The Los Angeles South Central
artist Mark Bradford makes
what he calls paintings without using paint.
As he told Artslant’s
Abraham Ritchie “I see them as paintings
because I make it easy on myself, because they are on a stretcher bar. I’m not
getting into whether that’s a collage, or . . . They’re on stretcher bars so
they’re a painting for me…I’m very impatient and oil painting takes a long time
to dry. It’s very toxic; it gives me a headache, so I knew I couldn’t use
it. Acrylic paint, it doesn’t work for me. These endpapers were cheap, fifty
cents a box, which was good getting out of school. So it organically led me to
other materials. When I needed more end paper I’d walk out, find some street paper;
the street paper has color so I'd have a color pattern now. Eventually I
decided that because of the territory I was mining, paper made sense. I
don’t know when, or at what point, but I just decided, ok I’m going to keep
doing this.”
A mining that sees him use the everyday materials of black
culture to create his modernist abstractions. Although best known for his two
dimensional works there is a sculptural ethic that underpins his work.
As he explained “I started off as a sculptor, and before that I was a
hairdresser. When you are doing hair you are always thinking about it in three
dimensions. So that was very, very easy for me to do, to work
three-dimensionally. I’m sure I translated that on some unconscious level
when I started working two-dimensionally in regards to depth.”
Bradford’s major break came
just four years after earning his MFA from the California Institute of the
Arts when two of his works were included in the 2001 Studio
Museum of Harlem’s Freestyle
exhibition curated by the museum’s director Thelma Golden.
As Golden told the Los
Angeles Times’ Ernest Hardy “When I saw Mark's paintings I was
amazed by the very elegant but raw quality. They felt very emotional, very
immediate. But also so beautifully considered.
About his inclusion in the exhibition Bradford has stated “I'm forever grateful to Miss Golden for getting me
from behind that pressing comb."
Bradford’s current exhibition
Matrix 172 is a 60foot wall drawing at
the Wadsworth Atheneum
Museum of Art and is in show until the 6th of September.
1 comment:
Post a Comment