Just about every day
around dawn, the artist
Lauren Halsey heads out into South Central Los Angeles
to collect things.
اضافة اعلان
She gathers whatever items catch
her eye along the way and takes photos on her phone. Those finds, together with
the ephemera she has saved since her teenage years of making collages (magazine
clippings, church figurines, shiny foil palm trees, miniature cars, aquarium
plants), fill every corner of Halsey’s
Los Angeles studio and gradually make
their way into her artwork.
Now the latest iterations of
those creations are on view at David Kordansky’s new gallery in Chelsea in a
show that opened Friday, the artist’s first major solo exhibition in
New York City.
“I’m documenting intersections
that I need to return to or follow up on,” Halsey said in a recent interview at
the gallery, where she was installing the show.
“I’ve got to archive this thing
or this person or this place or this spirit. Some days are easier than others —
I find a business card. Other days I find a whole Sphinx. Or I find a figurine
that rocks my world.”
“I’m an obsessive collector of
objects, of images — scanning the streets,” she added.
“I’ve been collecting as long as
I could breathe.”
Dressed in a camouflage baseball
cap, a purple fleece jacket and white high tops, Halsey exudes a low-key yet
focused energy. You can see why she wakes up early and stays up late — “I have
so much to get done” — and why a work is only finished when a deadline forces
her to stop.
“I can just keep going,” Halsey
said.
“I can keep adding layers.”
Through her installations Halsey
is honoring the community that nurtured and inspired her — not only her mother,
a teacher, or her father, an accountant, but the church, the convenience
stores, her bus route, her relatives and community centers. She is also
documenting a particular segment of society, elevating an urban vernacular that
often gets devalued or ignored.
At a time when many black artists
are being recognized for figurative art, Halsey has been making large-scale
sculptures and reliefs. And while her installations may allude to economic
hardship, gentrification or gang violence, they convey an explosive sense of
joy.
“She’s not trying to unpack
notions of racism, she’s just trying to celebrate Blackness,” said the artist
Charles Gaines, who taught Halsey when she was an undergraduate at the
California Institute of the Arts. “She’s trying to bring into the realm of art
things that are thought to be low culture, things that are victimized by a
certain stereotype.”
Halsey has achieved acclaim and
prominence that is rare for an artist of just 34. Her work is already in the
collections of major institutions like the Hammer Museum and the Museum of
Contemporary Art in Los Angeles; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Institute
of Contemporary Art, Miami; and the Studio Museum in Harlem.
This year, she was selected by
the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York for its prestigious roof garden
commission, but it has been postponed until next spring because of supply-chain
issues. (The roof will instead be used this summer as a place to sit and have
snacks, with local DJs hosting dance parties on weekend nights.)
Lauren Halsey sits in front of her installation ‘My
Hope’ (2022), with ‘Untitled’ (2022), made of synthetic hair on wood, hanging at
right at David Kordansky Gallery in New York on May 4, 2022. The artist’s solo
show at the new Chelsea gallery honors and documents her neighborhood in South
Central Los Angeles.
Halsey has perhaps become known
as much for her activism as for her art, namely the community center in Los
Angeles she started that became an important food pantry during the
pandemic and her policy of making sure some of her art sells to collectors of color.
“Lauren is a builder — a builder
of art, a builder of objects but also a builder of community,” said Thelma
Golden, director of the Studio Museum, where Halsey did a residency in 2014.
“In that really potent
combination is where her deep significance lies.”
For the Kordansky show, Halsey
has created expansive sculptures populated by her collectibles in the palette
of her neighborhood: hot pink, orange, green, yellow; painted boxes inspired by
local signs and symbols; and what she calls grottos, including one with a
functioning waterfall that she eventually wants to bring back home for children
to enjoy.
The neighborhood is clearly the
fuel behind Halsey’s work, namely the collage of symbols she described as its
own form of placemaking, such as advertisements for batteries or weaves.
“All these things demystify
what’s in the store,” Halsey said.
“It’s important to archive not
just the business name, but the painterly decisions they make to communicate to
the neighborhood how they’re organizing the minimarket.”
She is paying tribute to the
unsung workers in local organizations making a difference in people’s lives
every day, calling them her “collaborators, the most genius community leader
role models.” Halsey mentions the Sisters of Watts, for example, which offers
after-school programs, and Vanessa’s Positive Energy, which offers dance
lessons.
“Folks are doing the work — from
providing Easter baskets to food to karate to tickets to the sports games to
all the education support,” she said. “The issue is the infrastructure that
makes it so hard to do the work. But the work is being done.”
“They are total pillars for me —
they’re monuments within themselves,” she added.
“I work closely with them. I’m
lucky.”
Somehow, Halsey has been able to
reconcile her commercial success with the more challenged world she came from —
in large part by giving back. Her
Summaeverythang community center, which
offers organic produce to residents of Watts and South Central Los Angeles,
aims to “develop Black and Brown empowerment,” the website says, “personal,
political, economic, and sociocultural”.
“It would be crazy for me to make
this work about South Central that exists within a marketplace and not
recirculate or recycle the rewards of that work to the neighborhood and to the
people who need to benefit from it the most,” she said.
“I can accomplish a lot in a
sculpture, but that’s not a tutoring program, that’s not a food program.”
She also said she does not see
her neighborhood through “the lens of darkness or constant trauma”. Rather,
Halsey said, she sees its beauty and its humanity: the fertile ground she
continues to draw from as an artist.
Halsey counts among her greatest
influences the artists Betye Saar, Overton Loyd, Mike Kelley, Dominique Moody
and
Mark Bradford. Ultimately, she said, art for her is about getting “to the
depths or the bones of what I care about,” what she said the singer and artist
George Clinton calls “going for your funk”.
But don’t ask her to explain
exactly what funk means. “I wouldn’t define it, because once you define it,
it’s dead — you boxed it in, you flattened it,” Halsey said.
“It’s an energy, it’s a life
force, it’s something that I’m chasing every day.”
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