"Encodings" Exhibition

The Studio Museum in Harlem

poster for "Encodings" Exhibition

This event has ended.

The 2008–09 artists in residence, Khalif Kelly, Adam Pendleton and Dawit L. Petros, consider looking at an artwork akin to the act of reading. In his own way, each shows a deep concern with how images generate meaning and has developed his own grammar and narrative system with which to make images. The resulting works and projects that make up Encodings reflect contemporary art’s concern with language and its use across media and beyond the studio and gallery spaces. For these artists, images are as much readable containers of information as they are systems for masking meaning.

Khalif Kelly’s paintings depict the allegorical tale of a preadolescent hero and his friends on their adventures in a mythical land. While the paintings’ composition and subjects are often borrowed directly from historical old master paintings, they feature hard edges and striations from the low-bit computer graphics that inspire their style. Drawing from a range of pop-cultural references as vast as 1930s and 40s cartoons to Stanley Kubrick’s films, these canvases give viewers a story out of sequence, so Museum visitors must actively reconstruct the narrative from these fragments.

Adam Pendleton’s conceptual practice uses language as its medium. Sometimes he works with language literally by combining text and image, and other times figuratively by treating sculptural objects as an alphabet. Pendleton’s practice demonstrates how a single idea can be represented in multiple media and manners, and how at its most extreme, in works such as Code Poem, image (Hannah Wiener) (2009), it refuses concrete representation altogether. By playing with signs and their systems, Pendleton’s artworks and the meaning we extract from them rely as much on divergent sources as they do on context.

During his residency, Dawit L. Petros took a series of walks around Harlem. Out of these meanderings came Petros’s “Harlechrome” series (2008–09), which photographically isolates and captures colors and textures from the area to create an abstract and semiabstract photographic archive of Harlem. By editing images to reduce the neighborhood to texture and color, Petros offers an alternative narrative for the community, one told through formal attributes rather than social history and mythology.

There is no one key to understanding the work of these three artists, but each practice engages the viewer in an active process of interpretation and understanding. As a result, it is the viewer who must ultimately complete the artworks in this exhibition by “reading” them and making meaning from the art.

Media

Schedule

from July 16, 2009 to October 29, 2009

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