David Hammons: Phat Free


Exhibition | May 16-June 1, 2019

This is a past exhibition.

 

A special presentation of one of David Hammons’ first video works organized in collaboration with the Coppel Collection, Mexico City.

About the Exhibition.

TMR is pleased to collaborate with Colección Isabel y Agustin Coppel (CIAC) to present David Hammons’ Phat Free—one of his only videos to date—for a limited two-week run.  A recording of a 1995 public performance that was then edited and exhibited at the 1997 Whitney Biennial, this will be the first time that the work has been publicly screened in Los Angeles.

At the beginning of the video there is nothing to see, only noises in the darkness, heard in the moments before images.  When the visuals start, we see a figure, filmed in a blur of low-light slow motion, kicking a metal can through the nighttime streets of New York City. As he moves down the street, the kicking takes on a pattern; from noise to a kind of music. And then the video loops and we go back into the dark. But the noises have changed. No longer such a mystery, they now testify to the presence of a person and a place. No longer noise, they are now signals in the dark, reminding us of what just was, and presaging what will soon be again.

David Hammons: Phat Free is presented in concurrence to the artist’s first solo exhibition in Los Angeles in nearly 45 years, staged just up the road in the city’s Arts District. To travel the space between, up-or-down the historic and storied Alameda Corridor, is to see the neighborhood be transformed, from a space where people lived on and made their living off of the streets, to one where moneyed consumption and astronomical rents are the norm. Phat Free is a poetic rejoinder to this process, emphasizing a cyclical meander of meaning over progress and accumulation, and reminding us of a human creativity that does not need high production values or institutional validation.

About the Artist.

David Hammons (b. 1943, US) was born in Springfield, Illinois. He moved to Los Angeles in 1963 to attend Chouinard Art Institute (now CalArts) from 1966–1968 and then Otis Art Institute from 1968–1972. In 1974 Hammons settled in New York City. Influenced by Arte Povera, Hammons' work speaks of cultural overtones; employing provocative materials such as elephant dung, chicken parts, strands of hair, and bottles of cheap wine. Centered in the Black urban experience, Hammons often uses sarcasm as a means of confronting cultural stereotypes and racial issues. Hammons was the recipient of the MacArthur Fellowship in 1991. Hammons' work is collected by major public and private institutions internationally, among them: Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo; Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge; Glenstone, Potomac; Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, Chicago; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; The Museum of Modern Art, New York; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Fondation Cartier pour l'art contemporain, Paris; Francois Pinault Foundation, Venice; and Tate Britain, London amongst others.

Press

July 24, 2019 | David Hammons: Phat FreePERFORMA Magazine

Credits

David Hammons: Phat Free is organized by TMR and curated by César García-Alvarez, TMR Executive and Artistic Director.

This exhibition is part of Histories of a Vanishing Present, TMR’s 2019-2020 curatorial cycle exploring the global dynamics of postmemory. Major support for this cycle is provided by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.

TMR's program is made possible with the support of its Board of Directors, Big Mistake Patron Group, International Council, and Contemporary Council.

 

Photo Credit: The Mistake Room. Copyright 2019. The Mistake Room Inc.