Street Talk: Awol Erizku Fills a Conceptual Gallery

Transcription

Street Talk: Awol Erizku Fills a Conceptual Gallery
Charlotte Jansen, “Street talk: Awol Erizku fills a conceptual gallery with work inspired
by LA turf,” Wallpaper, January 22, 2016.
The 27 year-old artist Awol Erizku has created The Duchamp Detox Clinic – a roving ‘conceptual gallery’ that showcases the
work of artists specifically interested in ready mades. Pictured: Ask the dust, 2016 (a collaboration with floral designer Sarah
Lineberger)
Street Talk: Awol Erizku Fills a Conceptual Gallery with
Work Inspired by LA Turf
By Charlotte Jansen | January 22, 2016
If there’s one thing LA has plenty of, it’s detox clinics. But you won’t find conventional therapies at The Duchamp
Detox Clinic, where the cleansing is more esoterically observed.
The brainchild of 27-year-old artist Awol Erizku, The Duchamp Detox Clinic is a roving ‘conceptual gallery’—a
transient space showcasing the work of artists who aren’t already represented and whose interests are in ready
mades that repurpose objects with new ideas. The Clinic’s first brick-and-mortar exhibit opened last week at the
Everest Trading Corporation—a backpack and luggage warehouse in downtown LA’s Arts District—in partnership
with Night Gallery.
2276 EAST 16TH STREET, LOS ANGELES 90021
NIGHTGALLERY.CA
Ethiopian-born Erizku, who grew up in the Bronx and graduated from Yale’s MFA programme in 2014, relocated his
studio to LA a year ago. In 2015, he premiered his film Serendipity at MoMA, New York. At the end of last year, his
2013 photographs of sex workers in Addis Ababa, where the artist was born, showed at Flag Foundation.
Those previous public presentations seem to have little to do, either in medium or charge, with what you get at The
Duchamp Detox Clinic, which is inaugurated with an Erizku solo show entitled ‘Bad II The Bone.’ Yet they share a
common aesthetic of popping colours combined with assertively formal compositions. ‘Bad II The Bone’ is a
conceptual journey crystallising the 360-degree experience of travelling through the sprawling neighbourhoods of
the City of Angels.
Though the work on display includes both sculptures and paintings, this approach is manifested in a Porsche 914,
salvaged from the desert and transformed into a giant planter, titled Ask the dust—an allusion to the contradictions
of car fanaticism and clean living in the city. Simultaneously, large paintings with vigorous lashes of house and
spray paint on plywood backboards, have a texture reminiscent of buffing, the process of painting over graffiti. In
other pieces, too, the salient materials recall neighborhoods of the city: the plastic veneer used in pieces such
as Skip, hop, trip, drop, flip, flop with the white tube sock, 2015, are a distinct reminder of the tents that line nearby
Skid Row, while the numbers in Say It Here, While It’s Safe, 2015, are in fact gang turf markings.
The markers and structures that delineate and divide up urban neighborhoods and built environments have always
interested Erizku. Growing up in a housing complex in the Bronx, overlooking a basketball court where gangs would
gather, the social and political implications of architecture became a natural fascination. While these works might
reference such themes more obliquely, the titles—such as Black Americans Killed by Police in 2014 Outnumbered
Those Who Died on 9/11, 2015—highlight the artist’s political objectives in no uncertain terms.
The space opens with an inaugural Erizku solo show, 'Bad II The Bone'—a conceptual, 360-degree experience of travelling
through the sprawling neighbourhoods of the City of Angels
2276 EAST 16TH STREET, LOS ANGELES 90021
NIGHTGALLERY.CA
Featuring both sculptures and paintings, the works exhibited reference graffiti, gangland markings, materials that are
synonymous with specific areas of the city and more
Growing up in a housing complex in the Bronx, overlooking a basketball court where gangs would gather, Erizku has long been
fascinated by the markers and structures that delineate and divide up urban neighborhoods and built environments
2276 EAST 16TH STREET, LOS ANGELES 90021
NIGHTGALLERY.CA
The Clinic occupies the Everest Trading Corporation—a backpack and luggage warehouse in downtown LA’s Arts District—and is run in
partnership with Night Gallery
2276 EAST 16TH STREET, LOS ANGELES 90021
NIGHTGALLERY.CA