Ed Clark Studio Logo
icon
home ed clark works shows collections contact

(current)


past


(upcoming)



past shows


Vienna Group Photo

from left: writer GEOFFREY JACQUES,
curator DAVID HAMMONS, artist ED CLARK,
artist STANLEY WHITNEY, artist DENYSE THOMASOS

Quiet as it's Kept
Christine König Gallery, Vienna
May 15 - August 3, 2002

A unique exhibition curated by the artist David Hammons, Quiet as it's Kept, an exhibition featuring three painters based in New York, seeks to challenge the comforting discourse surrounding the presumed transnational identity of abstract painting.

Painters Ed Clark, Stanley Whitney and Denyse Thomaso are all abstract artists who are also African Americans. Each one works in New York City. While none of this seems remarkable in itself, this exhibition seeks to challenge the commonplace identification the art public often makes between black artists and what might be called facile narratives surrounding "African American art."

Such narratives often fail to take into account, suggests curator Hammons, the fact that there might be a unique " and hitherto little examined" approach to abstract painting that derives from the African American experience. Each of the artists in Quiet as it's Kept has spent his or her career attempting to evade the gaze of those who would police the definitions of "black" art.

Clark's luminous canvases live in an environment of absolute freedom. The paintings are often created using a push broom, and carry within them not only an intimation of a reversal of status embodied in that tool, but the paintings also suggest an obscure sense of unrestricted play.

Whitney creates paintings in which color, randomness, and architecture are all constituent elements. The apparently random patterning of color in his canvases recall those patterns that can sometimes be seen in the cloth and quilt making artists of the African American south.

On the other hand, Thomasos is concerned with the abstract patterns that draw their dynamism from those structures that have hitherto been considered as signs of restriction, such as jails and slave transport vessels.

"The identity of black culture," writes New York independent critic Geoffrey Jacques, who contributed an essay to the exhibition's catalogue, "is deeply rooted in experiment practice."

That aspect of black identity, which is widely recognized in music and is beginning to be recognized in literature, has rarely been recognized in the visual arts. With this exhibition, curator David Hammons seeks to sharpen a iscourse that will focus attention on the experimental nature of African American visual culture as well.

Return to Main Page


The crowd outside the Gallery


Exhibition Catalogue (75 pages),
Available at Christine König Gallery


Visitors enjoying ED CLARK's "Midi Series Orange".



Copyright | Privacy Policy | Search | Webmaster
Last updated: September 7, 2007