'For me, I think our understanding of the human experience is connected to our understanding of our origin story. And the show is about a physiological return, but also a kind of historic return. What does it mean for human beings to return to their place of origin, as Africa is the place where human beings evolved?'–Tavares Strachan, July 2023
Goodman Gallery presents The Return, the first solo exhibition on the African continent for Nassau-born, New York-based interdisciplinary conceptual artist Tavares Strachan. The show includes ceramics, which are being displayed in an exhibition context for the first time, as well as new paintings and locally created, handwoven tapestries–all of which have been made specifically for this presentation.
Please note that prior booking will be required for the duration of the exhibition.
Over the past two decades, Strachan has formed a research-intensive practice that taps into art, science, history, and cultural critique with thematic investigations related to invisibility, displacement and loss. The artist's primary interest is storytelling, with a focus on how an experience has an impact on the viewer. This is extended into his considerations of multidimensional performance and how working in multiple mediums collides.
Central to the show is The Encyclopedia of Invisibility–a fifteen-year-long project resulting in an ongoing anthology of hidden stories that have been left out of history. This work anchors his thematic and material voyages, emphasising the necessity for articulating multiple histories, and how power operates in the production and recording of a singular narration of history.
The artist's tapestries use text and subject matter from The Encyclopedia of Invisibility, weaving layered references together to explore an expanded visual enunciation of historical accounts, mapping out temporal and political connections. His paintings offer an intimate examination of cosmic influences, and highlight Strachan's knowledge and fascination with astronomy. Work such as the Galaxy paintings chart space. They explore the idea that because of the infinite speed of light, when you gaze up into the night sky, you're looking into the past, collapsing the way that we think about time.
The ceramic works, presented as totems of key African American, Caribbean and Brazilian figures, offer an expression of their stories as having a spiritual significance in addition to their social impact. The presence of clay in the exhibition also thickens Strachan's consideration of materials as reflections of deep time.
'I love this idea that the mud is an integral part of human existence and human evolution. And the idea that you can build something from clay, fire it, and create form is something that is very much connected to the many cultures creation story, but the idea of just being an artist in general. So, clay is a really important motivator and driver for this exhibition'–Strachan
Press release courtesy Goodman Gallery.
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