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Mark Bradford (born November 20, 1961) is an American artist. Born in Los Angeles, Bradford studied at the California Institute of the Arts. He is best known for his collaged painting works, which have been shown internationally. Bradford was the US presentantive representative for the 2016 Venice Biennale. He lives and works in Los Angeles.
Early life and education
Bradford was born and raised in South Los Angeles.[1] His mother rented a beauty salon in Leimert Park.[2][3] Bradford moved with his family to a largely white neighborhood in Santa Monica when he was 11, but his mother still maintained her business in the old neighborhood.[2] Bradford worked in her shop at times.[4] When Bradford graduated high school, he obtained his hairdresser's license and went to work at his mother's salon.
Bradford began his studies at the California Institute of the Arts in 1991 at the age of 30.[5] He earned a BFA in 1995 and an MFA in 1997.[6]
Work
Bradford is known for grid-like abstract paintings combining collage with paint, typically using household items to create his work. His works are made out of layers of paper and cords which he carves into using various tools and techniques, including gouging, tearing, shredding, gluing, power-washing and sanding.[7]
Throughout Bradford's career, he has collected ‘merchant posters’ which are printed sheets advertising services and posted in neighborhoods. According to critic Sebastian Smee, “The posters advertised cheap transitional housing, foreclosure prevention, food assistance, debt relief, wigs, jobs, DNA-derived paternity testing, gun shows and quick cash, as well as legal advice for immigrants, child custody and divorce.”[8]
Bradford is gay, and sometimes incorporates ideas of masculinity and gender in his work. Bradford sometimes incorporates ideas of masculinity and gender in his work, drawing on his experiences as a gay man.[9]
Notable works
In 2006, Bradford painted 'Scorched Earth' and 'Black Wall Street', based on the 1921 Tulsa race massacre.[10]
Bradford's collage Orbit (2007), contains a magazine image of a basketball placed at the heart of a dense lattice of Los Angeles streets. Created by the cumulative and subtractive processes of collage and décollage, layered with paint, Orbit appears as an aerial view of a contorting, mutating, and decaying city whose tiny, intricate street grids can no longer maintain its structural integrity. Bradford's improvisational command of these large areas suggests the formidable energy of mass consumption and, perhaps more importantly, its counterpart, the mass generation of detritus. The image recalls Basquiat's iconographies of black sports heroes, but Bradford's treatment is far more ambivalent; after all, is the dream connoted by the basketball a beacon of hope or a false promise of the easiest exit from the inner city?
Bradford's A Truly Rich Man is One Whose Children Run into His Arms Even When His Hands Are Empty (2008) is nearly 9 feet wide and 9 feet tall. According to Maxwell Heller in The Brooklyn Rail, it calls to mind the charred and shattered windshields of cars burned in riots—black, webbed with streaks of light, sleek. If studied section by section, it offers traces of the artist's sensual, tactile process, revealing delicate layers of found material sliced and sanded, lacquered and pasted until transformed.[11]
Bradford's practice also encompasses video, print, and installation.[12] His installation Mithra (2008) is a 70 x 20 x 25ft ark constructed from salvaged plywood barricade fencing. He shipped it to New Orleans for Prospect New Orleans, an exhibition of contemporary art commemorating Hurricane Katrina.[13] That same year, he created an installation inspired by Hurricane Katrina on the roof of the Steve Turner Contemporary Gallery, across the street from the Los Angeles County Museum of Art.[14] It was restaged at the 55th Carnegie International.[15]
In 2012, Bradford narrated the soundtrack to the 30-minute, site-specific dance duet Framework by choreographer Benjamin Millepied in conjunction with the show The Painting Factory: Abstraction after Warhol at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles.[16]
In 2015, Mark Bradford created Pull Painting 1, a site-specific wall drawing inspired by Sol LeWitt along a 60-foot wall in the Wadsworth Atheneum as part of the museum's MATRIX 172 program. For this, Bradford applied dense layers of vibrantly coloured paper, paint, and rope. He sanded, peeled, stripped, and cut away from the wall to create the textured composition.[17][18]
The same year, Bradford created Waterfall (2015) for his exhibition titled Be Strong Boquan at Hauser & Wirth, 18th Street, New York. Waterfall is composed of remnants of paper and rope that were peeled away from a pull painting, whose surface was built up by layering canvas with alternating sheets of billboard paper and rope. Through the process of pulling string across the canvas, Bradford created long fibrous ribbons of coloured paper that revealed the archaeology of its host.[19]
Also in 2017, Bradford created '150 Portrait Tone', a wall painting at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art. The mural features the text of the 911 call by Philando Castile's girlfriend, Diamond Reynolds. According to LACMA's website, 'The title, 150 Portrait Tone, refers to the name and color code of the pink acrylic used throughout the painting. Like the now-obsolete “flesh” crayon in the Crayola 64 box (renamed “peach” in 1962), the color “portrait tone” carries inherent assumptions about who, exactly, is being depicted. In the context of Bradford’s painting, the title presents a sobering commentary on power and representation.'[20]
Commissions
In 2014, Bradford created a large-scale work for the Tom Bradley International Terminal at the Los Angeles International Airport titled “Bell Tower” is a “huge, four-sided work, made from wood, and covered with colour printed paper – bringing to mind the hand-bill covered wooden sidings that have inspired Bradford throughout his career.”[21]
In 2015 Bradford unveiled Elgin Gardens, a special commission for 1221 Avenue of the Americas at Rockefeller Center, New York NY.
In 2017, Mark Bradford installed 'We The People' at the US Embassy in London.[22] Featuring fragments and full articles of the US constitution, the monumental painting is made out of 32 separate canvas that occupy an entire wall in the atrium of the embassy.
In December 2018, a monumental new commission by Bradford was unveiled at the University of California, San Diego Stuart Collection. Entitled "WHAT HATH GOD WROUGHT," the 195-foot-tall work is the tallest structure on the campus, and takes as its point of departure the powerful influence of technology on communication.[23]
In November 2017, Bradford presented Pickett's Charge, a monumental cyclorama of paintings commissioned by the Smithsonian's Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C. This work is based directly on the Gettysburg Cyclorama, a monumental installation at Gettysburg National Military Park which depicts Pickett's Charge, the climactic assault in the 1863 Battle of Gettysburg during the American Civil War. At 400 linear feet of wall space, the installation is Bradford's largest site-specific work to date.
Other projects
In 2009, the Getty Museum invited Bradford to do a project of his choice with its education department. He chose teachers rather than students as his primary audience, bringing 10 other artists – including Michael Joo, Catherine Opie, Amy Sillman, and Kara Walker – to collaborate in developing a set of free lesson plans for K-12 teachers.[24]
In conjunction with the 2017 U.S. Pavilion exhibition, Bradford embarked on a six-year collaboration with Venice nonprofit social cooperative Rio Terà dei Pensieri,[25] which provides employment opportunities to men and women incarcerated in Venice who create artisanal goods and other products and supports their re-integration into society. Titled Process Collettivo, the Rio Terà dei Pensieri/Bradford collaboration aims to launch a sustainable longterm program that brings awareness to both the penal system and the success of the social cooperative model. A storefront, located in the heart of Venice at San Polo 2599a, is the initial manifestation of the collaboration, and is open to the public in conjunction with the La Biennale di Venezia.
For one day only in August 2013, Project Hermés, a work by Mark Bradford installed in a private home in La Jolla, California, opened to the public before the building was eventually demolished.[26]
In October 2018, an image of Here, a mixed media on canvas work by Bradford was featured on the Order of Service for Princess Eugenie of York's wedding to Jack Brooksbank. The artwork was also displayed on the colorful sashes worn by the bridesmaids and pageboys in the wedding party.[27]
In advance of the inaugural Los Angeles edition of the Frieze Art Fair, in January 2019, it was announced that Bradford had created a unique image of a police body camera, entitled "Life Size." Proceeds from sales of this limited-edition print series went directly to Agnes Gund's Art for Justice Fund, to help support greater career opportunities for people who are transitioning back home from prison.[28] Bradford was the first artist since the Fund's establishment to directly support the organization with proceeds from the sale of his artwork, and the initiative raised more than $1 million.[29]
Art + Practice
In 2013, Mark Bradford, the philanthropist Eileen Harris Norton, and neighbourhood activist Allan Dicastro established Art + Practice, an organization based in Leimert Park that encourages engagement with the arts. Additionally, via a collaborator it supports local 18- to 24-year-olds who are transitioning out of foster care. Bradford, DiCastro and Norton are long-term residents of South Los Angeles and have witnessed first-hand how a lack of educational and social resources can affect the community. The trio created Art + Practice as a developmental platform for transitional age youth, stressing the importance of creative activity and practical skills for personal transformation and social change.[30]
Exhibitions
In 1998, Bradford had a solo show, Distribution, at L.A.'s Deep River, a gallery started by artist Daniel Joseph Martinez and artist Glenn Kaino.[31]
In 2001, Thelma Golden included Bradford's hairdressing end-paper collages Enter and Exit the New Negro (2000)[32] and 'Dreadlocks caint tell me shit' (2000) in the breakthrough 'Freestyle' exhibition of 28 African American artists at the Studio Museum in Harlem. The use of hairdressing endpapers alludes to Bradford's former career working as a hairdresser in his mother's hair salon in Leimert Park, South Los Angeles.
Bradford has participated in the 9th Gwangju Biennale (2012) and has previously exhibited at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2012),[33][34] the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston (2011),[35] the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2011),[36] at Ohio State University (2010), the Carnegie Museum of Art (2008),[37] Sikkema Jenkins Gallery, Street Level (2007) at the Nasher Museum of Art at Duke University, at the Wexner Center for the Arts, USA Today at the Royal Academy in London, 'In Site' at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego and the Centro Cultural de Tijuana, 'ARCO 2003' in Madrid and in the Sao Paulo Biennial (2006), Whitney Biennial (2006), Liverpool Biennial (2006).
In 2014, Bradford presented The King's Mirror, a 100-feet-long mural which consisteds of 300 individual works mounted on plywood each measuring 22 by 28 inches and which remained in situ at the Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University for a year.[38]
In June 2015 'Mark Bradford: Sea Monsters', toured to Gemeentemuseum Den Haag, Netherlands from the Rose Art Museum (2014) September and in January 2015 and he presented "Tears of a Tree", a new body of work at The Rockbund Art Museum in Shanghai, China.
In 2015 Bradford presented 'Scorched Earth', his first solo museum exhibition in Los Angeles, at the Hammer Museum.[39] ('Scorched Earth' was subsequently moved to The Broad museum.[40]) The exhibition showcased a suite of new paintings, a multimedia and a major painting on the Lobby Wall.
Earlier that May, The Baltimore Museum of Art and The Rose Art Museum at Brandeis University, in cooperation with the U.S. Department of State's Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, presented Mark Bradford as the representative for the United States at La Biennale di Venezia 57th International Art Exhibition. Bradford's exhibition, titled 'Tomorrow Is Another Day', garnered extensive critical acclaim and Bradford was lauded as 'our Jackson Pollock'.[41]
In December 2017, it was announced that Bradford would inaugurate Hauser & Wirth's gallery space in Hong Kong with a body of new work.[42] The exhibition, which opened March 27, 2018 comprised a number of new large-scale paintings as well as works that incorporate merchant posters found on the streets.
In September 2018, The Baltimore Museum of Art opened Tomorrow Is Another Day, a re-staging of Bradford's exhibition at La Biennale di Venezia 57th International Art Exhibition. As part of the exhibition, Bradford collaborated with children and staff from the Greenmount West Community Center to silkscreen merchandise on sale in a permanent pop-up shop in the museum. One hundred percent of the proceeds go directly back to the center.[43]
Mark Bradford: New Works, Bradford's first gallery exhibition in his hometown of Los Angeles in over 15 years, opened on February 17, 2018. Featuring ten new works, the exhibition continued his investigations into the technical and sociopolitical potentials of abstract painting. Among the paintings on view was Moody Blues for Jack Whitten (2018), a composition of lines and shades of blue that Bradford initiated before the death of his friend Jack Whitten, and completed for this exhibition.[44]
On July 27, 2019 the Long Museum in Shanghai, China opened 'Mark Bradford: Los Angeles', the artist's largest exhibition in China to date. The exhibition featured a new, site-specific sculpture, “Float,” in response to the museum's architecture, as well as a series of large-scale paintings about the Watts riots that took place in Los Angeles in 1965. The Long Museum agreed to make admission to Los Angeles free to the public throughout the duration of the exhibition.[45]
On October 1, 2019, Hauser & Wirth opened, ‘Cerberus’, the artist's first exhibition in the gallery's London space. The exhibition consisteds of nine large-scale paintings and a video titled, “Dancing in the Street.” The title of the exhibition is based on the mythological figure of Cerberus, the three-headed dog from Greek mythology that guards the entryway to Hades.[46] The exhibition will be open through December 21, 2019.
In 2020 and during the Covid-19 Pandemic, Bradford conducted an Online Exhibition titled - "Quarantine Paintings." The exhibition consisted of three paintings the artist had created whilst in lockdown.[47]
Honors and awards
Bradford is a recipient of a Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant (2002),[48] a grant from the Nancy Graves Foundation Grant (2002), the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award (2003), the United States Artists fellowship (2006), the Bucksbaum Award, granted by The Whitney Museum of American Art (2006); a grant from the MacArthur Fellows Program (2009) (also called the "MacArthur Genius Award")[49] and the Wexner Center Residency Award (2009).[50]
In 2013 he was elected as a National Academician by the National Academy Museum and School of Fine Arts in New York. In 2015, he was presented with the US Department of State's Medal of Arts.[51]
In 2016, Bradford was awarded the High Museum of Art's David C. Driskell Prize.[52] In November 2017, Bradford was honored as WSJ magazine's Art Innovator at their annual Innovator Awards.[53]
In April 2019, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences announced that Mark Bradford would join over 200 other individuals as the academy's class of 2019 honorees.[54]
On March 5, 2021, the American Academy of Arts and Letters announced they would be inducting Mark Bradford into their newest class of members.[55]
Art market
In 2015 Bradford's mixed-media collage abstract "Constitution IV" (2013) was sold for $5.8 million at Phillips, an auction high for the artist, just months after 'Smear' (2015) was sold for $4.4 million, (the upper estimate was $700,000) at Sotheby's New York NY.[56][57]
In March 2018, Helter Skelter I, a monumental painting sold for US$12 million, an artist record and the highest-ever auction price achieved by a living African American artist, based on sales results from Phillips and previous auction data.[58]
In popular culture
Bradford was profiled on 60 Minutes, in an interview done by Anderson Cooper, which originally aired on May 12, 2019,[59] and in September 2020, CBS News received a News & Documentary Emmy Award News & Documentary Emmy Award in the category of Outstanding Arts, Culture and Entertainment Report.[60]
Selected bibliography
- Cornelia Butler and Katie Siegel, Mark Bradford: Scorched Earth, Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, and Prestel, New York, 2015
- Clara M. Kim, Larys Frogier and Doryun Chong, Mark Bradford: Tears of a Tree, Rockbund Art Museum, Shanghai, and Verlag für Moderne Kunst Nurnberg, 2015
- Christopher Bedford, Katy Siegel, Peter James Hudson, Anita Hill, Sarah Lewis and Zadie Smith, Mark Bradford: Tomorrow is Another Day, Gregory R. Miller, New York, and American Pavilion, Venice Biennale, 2017
- Stéphane Aquin and Evelyn Hankins, Mark Bradford, Yale University Press, New Haven, 2018
- Anita Hill, Sebastian Smee, Cornelia Butler, Mark Bradford, Phaidon Press, London, 2018
See also
Kea Tawana - sculptor who created a large wooden ark in Newark, New Jersey between 1982 and 1988
References
- ^ Holland Cotter. "Tracking Racial Identity, But Not Defined by It". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 December 2010.
- ^ a b Hardy, Earnest (11 June 2006). "The Eye Of L.A. / Mark Bradford". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 11 June 2006.
- ^ Miranda, Carolina. "After traveling the world, L.A. artist Mark Bradford gets a solo show in his hometown". The Los Angeles Times. Archived from the original on 20 June 2015. Retrieved 19 June 2015.
- ^ Dorothy Spears (December 12, 2010). "Hoop Dreams of His Own Design". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 December 2010.
- ^ Charmaine Picard. "Mark Bradford on class and identity in South Central LA". The Art Newspaper. Retrieved 7 May 2010.
- ^ "Mark Bradford". Art21.
- ^ "Mark Bradford: The 60 Minutes Interview". www.cbsnews.com. Retrieved 2021-03-08.
- ^ "Mark Bradford | Art | Phaidon Store". Phaidon. Retrieved 2019-04-22.
- ^ "Mark Bradford's Pride of Place". Aperture Foundation NY. 2016-09-20. Retrieved 2020-06-30.
- ^ Fox, Dan (29 April 2017). "Signs of the Times". Frieze (187). Retrieved 2 June 2021.
- ^ Maxwell Heller (3 February 2011). "The Mark Bradford Show". The Brooklyn Rail. Retrieved 3 February 2011.
- ^ Mark Bradford, White Cube.
- ^ Thomas H. Maugh II. "Artist Mark Bradford, USC's Elyn Saks win MacArthur grants". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 22 September 2009.
- ^ Christopher Knight (24 September 2008). "Mark Bradford's post-Katrina ark for New Orleans". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 24 September 2008.
- ^ "55th Carnegie International". www.frieze.com. September 9, 2008.
- ^ Laura Bleiberg. "Benjamin Millepied collaborating with Mark Bradford at MOCA". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 25 June 2010.
- ^ Staff, Sebastian Smee Globe. "Bradford enters MATRIX at Wadsworth Atheneum - The Boston Globe". BostonGlobe.com.
- ^ DUNNE, SUSAN. "Artist Creates Site-Specific 'Pull Painting' At Atheneum". courant.com.
- ^ "With 'Be Strong Boquan,' Mark Bradford Pushes His Painting Practice and Flexes His Comedy Chops". culturetype.com.
- ^ "Mark Bradford: 150 Portrait Tone". LACMA. Retrieved 2021-03-08.
- ^ "Did you spot Mark Bradford at the airport? | Art | Agenda". Phaidon. Retrieved 2019-04-22.
- ^ "U.S. Embassy London Mark Bradford – U.S. Department of State". Retrieved 2021-03-08.
- ^ "Towering achievement: Morse code-inspired sculpture lights up the sky at UCSD". San Diego Union-Tribune. 9 December 2018. Retrieved 9 December 2018.
- ^ Jori Finkel (17 June 2010). "Mark Bradford leads Kara Walker, Cathy Opie and more to create online teacher resource for Getty". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 17 June 2010.
- ^ Eve Macsweeney (26 January 2017). "Mark Bradford's Got A Brand New Bag". Vogue. Retrieved 26 January 2017.
- ^ Helen Stoilas. "Collector's difficult neighbour inspires artist Mark Bradford's installation". The Art Newspaper. Retrieved 1 August 2003.
- ^ "Eugenie & Jack's Bridesmaids and Pageboys Wore Less Traditional Looks Than Meghan & Harry's". Harper's Bazaar. 12 October 2018. Retrieved 12 October 2018.
- ^ "Mark Bradford Teams With Art for Justice at Frieze". artnet News. 25 January 2019. Retrieved 25 January 2019.
- ^ "Kicking off Frieze LA week at the Getty, art world honours Art for Justice Fund". www.theartnewspaper.com. 12 February 2020. Retrieved 2021-03-08.
- ^ Carolina Miranda. "Mark Bradford's Art + Practice to bring art, social services to Leimert". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 15 December 2014.
- ^ Jackson, Brian Keith (September 20, 2007). "How I Made It: Mark Bradford". New York Magazine. Retrieved 2020-08-03.
- ^ Holland Cotter (2010-12-24). "Tracking Racial Identity, But Not Defined by It". The New York Times. Retrieved 23 December 2010.
- ^ "Mark Bradford". SFMOMA.
- ^ "ROUNDTABLE announces participants". e-flux.
- ^ "Mark Bradford". ICA Boston.
- ^ "Mark Bradford". MCA Chicago.
- ^ Nicole J. Caruth. "Life on Mars: Carnegie International 2008". Art21. Retrieved 16 April 2008.
- ^ Charlotte Burns. "Mark Bradford maps exploitation at the Rose Art Museum". The Art Newspaper. Retrieved 8 September 2014.
- ^ "Mark Bradford: Scorched Earth | Hammer Museum". hammer.ucla.edu. Retrieved 2021-09-19.
- ^ "Scorched Earth". The Broad. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
- ^ Andrew Goldstein (11 May 2017). "Mark Bradford Is Our Jackson Pollock: Thoughts on His Stellar U.S. Pavilion at the Venice Biennale". artnet News. Retrieved 1 June 2017.
- ^ Anny Shaw. "Mark Bradford to launch Hauser & Wirth's Hong Kong gallery". The Art Newspaper. Retrieved 21 December 2017.
- ^ Mary Carole McCauley. "Greenmount West kids get silk-screening lesson from art superstar Mark Bradford". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 20 September 2018.
- ^ Mark Bradford: New Works
- ^ "Mark Bradford: Los Angeles - Long Museum". thelongmuseum.org. 2019. Archived from the original on 2019-06-22.
- ^ "Exhibitions — Mark Bradford Cerberus - Mark Bradford | Hauser & Wirth". www.hauserwirth.com. Retrieved 2021-03-08.
- ^ Griffin, Jonathan (2020-09-08). "Mark Bradford Reveals New Paintings Quarantined in a Grain Tower". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2021-03-08.
- ^ Painters and Sculptors Grant Program Recipients Joan Mitchell Foundation.
- ^ Christopher Knight (21 September 2009). "L.A. artist Mark Bradford wins MacArthur Fellowship". The Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 21 September 2009.
- ^ Mark Bradford White Cube.
- ^ "Mark Bradford – U.S. Department of State". Retrieved 2021-03-08.
- ^ "2016 Driskell Prize Winner Mark Bradford". High Museum of Art. Retrieved 2021-05-17.
- ^ Howie Kahn. "Mark Bradford Caps Off a Banner Year With His Largest Work to Date". WSJ. magazine. Retrieved 1 November 2017.
- ^ "New 2019 Academy Members Announced". American Academy of Arts & Sciences. Retrieved 2021-02-17.
- ^ "2021 Newly Elected Members – American Academy of Arts and Letters".
- ^ Freeman, Nate (2015-10-14). "Phillips Rebounds With $48.8 M. Contemporary Art Haul in London, Setting Records for Bradford and Nara". ARTnews.com. Retrieved 2021-02-17.
- ^ Scott Reyburn (13 May 2015). "A Rothko Tops Sotheby's Contemporary Art Auction". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 May 2015.
- ^ Eileen Kinsella (16 March 2018). "Eli Broad's Museum Is the Buyer of the Record-Setting $12 Million Mark Bradford Painting". artnet News. Retrieved 16 March 2018.
- ^ "Mark Bradford: The "60 Minutes" interview". CBS News. May 12, 2019. Retrieved 2020-10-01.
- ^ "CBS NEWS WINS FOUR EMMY AWARDS – THE MOST FOR A BROADCAST NETWORK". ViacomCBS Press Express. Retrieved 2021-03-08.