Thomas J Price's multidisciplinary practice amplifies the visibility of marginalized bodies and challenges our preconceived attitudes towards power and value. 'Beyond Measure' marks the British artist's first comprehensive solo exhibition in the US, following his acclaimed public presentation Witness (2022) with The Studio Museum in Harlem, NY. Featuring an entirely new series of sculptures in bronze and marble, the exhibition expands on Price's intrinsic understanding of materiality and scale to respond to traditional art canons and social structures. Whether encountered in a gallery or in public spaces, Price's works draw the viewer's attention to the nuances of conditioned behaviours and psychological frameworks, interrogating how we collectively occupy space. Beyond Measure is a celebration of the strength of everyday individuals, focusing on the universal human qualities that unite us, and providing an opportunity to arrive at a shared moment of connection.
About the exhibition
For the first time, Price will present a group of large-scale figurative sculptures together in one location, enabling the viewer to inhabit the space around the figures and become an active participant in the narrative between them. The fictional bronze works are constructed from a full spectrum of amalgamated images and observations, as well as 3D scanning that took place during an open call in LA last summer. Ranging from 9 to 12 ft in height, the multi-layered works are emblematic of boundless and unfixed identities that are leaning away from social or racial profiling. Price never casts his figurative works at a one-to-one scale, stating that the size variations foster an interplay with silently coded monuments that permeate society, prompting us to reconsider who should exist in that form. Price continues to reference existing historical narratives and the western canon of classical sculpture, with 'A Place Beyond' (2023) he features a subtle nod to Gian Lorenzo Bernini's 'David' in the formal structure of the body and sense of tension in the twist of the torso.
As a counter, Price's self-defined figures exist outside of the colonial gaze and monumentalise the ordinary, they encompass a space that transcend the need for dominance and aim to re-establish a deeper human context.
Adopting traditional materials and juxtaposing new technologies in order to critique art history is continued in a new series of pink marble heads, crafted in Italy using a dual approach of intricate hand-carving and digital techniques. Developed during the same open call as the full-scale figures, the works represent characteristics and physiognomy of real-life participants from LA, alongside details captured in the UK and beyond. In continuation of Price's Numen (Shifting Votive 1,2,3) series (2016) and 'Icon' series (2017), these works embody archetypal objects of worship in a modern age, signifying a sense of importance and splendour despite their anonymous identities. Raised on plinths, the works exude a powerful cultural resonance while reversing a familiar sense of hierarchy attached to material and status. Much like Price's 'Acrylic Head' series (2005–ongoing), also on view within the exhibition, these works act as intimate portals into the subjects' inner landscapes. Consumed in their own thoughts, the powerful ensemble projects a quiet confidence that calls for a process of self-analysis from the viewer, dismantling archetypes often present in western media by both normalising and elevating an alternative.
Price's critical investigation of these concepts extend beyond the medium of sculpture, utilising material techniques and modes of display that question social and artistic conventions. Price's early photographic series Marble Draft (2010–2013) is extended to Hand Arrangement (The Complex Journeys of a Simple Form) (2023), presented in an enlarged grid formation within the exhibition. This line of conceptual inquiry sets out to interrogate themes of provenance, the passage of time and implied context, illuminating how identity can be attributed based on expert opinion or an institution as holder of fact. Price's hands simultaneously complete, connect and edit elements of the original classical subject, taking agency within the narrative and making a statement on the plasticity of truth. The autobiographical intervention reconfigures taught history and becomes an active medium within a newly rearranged and highly personal narrative.
Accompanying the exhibition, we are pleased to welcome back the Education Lab initiative, titled I Made This, inspired by the work and practice of Thomas J Price. The Education Lab will explore themes of value, representation, and status within contemporary social structures, empowering young people to use art and their own first-hand experiences in a collaborative creative project. Participating students from local schools will explore the ways in which we celebrate success today and who they would like to commemorate, resulting in unique presentations within the Lab space throughout the summer.
Press release courtesy Hauser & Wirth.
901 East 3rd Street
Los Angeles, 90013
United States
www.hauserwirth.com
+1 213 943 1620
+1 213 943 1621 (Fax)
Tuesday – Sunday
11am – 6pm