Kenkeleba house and the Wilmer Jennings gallery

Figures Light and Abstraction


Figures Light and Abstraction
Ashley Cole, Kevin Cole, James A. Brown
Cynthia Hawkins and Debra Priestly
July 17 to August 29, 2024


 
 

Press Release
Reception and Installation / Podcast James A. Brown


 

FIGURES LIGHT AND ABSTRACTION


Reception
: Saturday, July 20, 2024, 3-6 pm
Artist Talk: Saturday, August 10, 2024, 3-6 pm


From July 17 to August 29, 2024, the Wilmer Jennings Gallery at Kenkeleba is pleased to present FIGURES LIGHT AND ABSTRACTION, an exhibition co-curated by Lamerol Gatewood and Michael Marshall. The figure in art has been represented since the beginning of time in a myriad of forms, shapes, and sizes. In this exhibit, artists work together to create compositional and symbolic possibilities, and  delineate elements of the ideal of figure, light, and abstraction. The featured artists are Ashley Cole, Kevin Cole, James Andrew Brown, Cynthia Hawkins, and Debra Priestly.

Ashley Cole,  embarking on a journey of continuous exploration and expression, seeks to convey the essence of inner balance amidst life’s unfolding experiences. Through draped paintings, she captures the fluidity of this journey, symbolizing the ever-evolving consciousness that shapes our existence. Ashley Cole uses paint and oil pastels to express light and abstraction on raw, unstretched canvas. “I delve into the depths of melanin shades, drawing inspiration from the tapestry of human experience. Incorporating marks reminiscent of indigenous cultures serves as testament to the universal quest for freedom—that transcends time and lineage.

Kevin Cole, while evolving from a more expressionistic place to one of abstraction, continues to evoke the necktie as a foundational aspect of his work. Cole makes use of figure, light, and abstraction aiming to communicate both the struggle and human spirit of African Americans. The importance of the necktie was introduced to Cole as a teenager when his grandfather, who lived through the Jim Crow era, told him how Black men were lynched by their neckties for attempting to cast their ballots. Using the necktie as a motif of this history contrasts with the use of bright colors to evoke a sense of hope. He says, “Since 1992, I have deeply explored the interplay between color and music, particularly influenced by the musical art forms of African American culture: such as Jazz, Blues, Rap, and Gospel.”

James Andrew Brown experiments with figures, light, and motion. He uses the juxtapositions of scale, color, and false deities as a technical way to achieve family images and icons of his religious faith and beliefs. His work subtly confronts the Black American experience often including the abstraction of caricature-like figures that may unconsciously bring about beliefs from the viewer surrounding American culture. Brown’s, visual language allows viewers to decide what is  being compared consciously or unconsciously. Brown states “I aim to create a visual language that not only challenges but also subverts conventional notions of representation. By fusing disparate elements, I seek to craft a dreamlike narrative that invites the viewer to step into a realm where the figurative and abstract converge.”

Cynthia Hawkins employs methodologies of figure, light, and abstraction within her prints and paintings. Hawkins says she uses, "natural forms, astronomic forms, maps, and interstellar locations to construct and reconstruct positionality and distance.” Hawkins uses a kind of scientific language of abstraction as a tool to mediate musical forms in colors. This is a kind of method of jazz idioms and call and response compositional forms as abstractions in the visual and plastic arts.

Debra Priestly encompasses the figure, light, and abstraction within her use of historical family objects such as her grandmother’s canning jars. Priestly explores themes of memory, ancestry, history, and cultural preservation. In the “mattoon series," canning jars are repurposed to pay tribute to her elder relatives. This is a model of abstraction where the shape and structure of the object are in conversation with the visual context. Priestly’s intricate design paper pattern cutouts are pulsing with life from memories of her great aunt’s intricate handmade lace tablecloths. Priestly’s sensitivity to her media and attention to detail are scintillating with light. The nine paper cutouts are visual explorations of intrigue and discovery, bringing back memories of great-grandmothers preserving fruits and vegetables for the winter months.


Gallery Hours:  Wednesday to Saturday, 11 am to 6 pm
Location:  219 East Second Street at Avenue B

Kenkeleba programs are funded in part by the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, the Ruth Foundation and many generous friends.

 

Installation, Video and Podcast: © Lamerol Gatewood
Reception / Events : Rodriguez Calero