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FAD Magazine covers contemporary art – News, Exhibitions and Interviews reported on from London

Rashid Johnson. Waves

Unfolding across the entirety of both of Hauser & Wirth’s London spaces is an exhibition dedicated exclusively to the works of renowned contemporary American artist Rashid Johnson. The exhibition brings together new paintings and ceramic tile mosaics evolving from Johnson’s recurring themes of anxiety and escapism – subjects of poignant relevance in today’s socio-political climate. Johnson’s work has never ceased to confront the complexity of the human condition and the strenuous spaces we negotiate. This exhibition reveals the constant metamorphosis of Johnson’s works, as he explains, ‘I am interested in how these recurring themes are able to pivot in order to speak to the times we live in’.

FAD magazine Rashid Johnson in the studio 2020 © Rashid Johnson Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth Photo: Axel Dupeu
Rashid Johnson in the studio 2020 © Rashid Johnson Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth Photo: Axel Dupeu

Among these new works is a collection of sculptural paintings in which the canvas is replaced by a mosaic of fractured ceramic glazed by Johnson in his studio, as well as wood, brass, oyster shell, spray paint and mirrored tiles. These constitute a continuation of Johnson’s Broken Men and Broken Crowd series. Between all the fragments contained in the works, a lyrical connectivity is at play, binding together these decade-spanning series. Within these bustling compositions of cracked colour and line, rudimentary renderings of human figures come to the forefront. These wild and agitated faces evolved from Johnson’s Anxious Men series; wherein anonymous, abstracted faces are rendered in black wax on a grid of white tiles. With these new, ever-complex mosaics, the artist pushes the anxiety of the figures, both metaphorically and physically, to breaking point. Whether grouped or solitary, these ‘broken men’ speak to the collective and individual identities in the midst of shifting social realities. Contemporary sensibilities are deconstructed and reassembled in Johnson’s collages, resulting in works of resounding catharsis.

FAD magazine Rashid Johnson Broken Crowd 2020 Ceramic tile, mirror tile, spray enamel, oil stick, black soap, wax 240.7 x 403.9 x 3 cm Photo: Martin Parsekian
Rashid Johnson Broken Crowd 2020 Ceramic tile, mirror tile, spray enamel, oil stick, black soap, wax 240.7 x 403.9 x 3 cm Photo: Martin Parsekian © Rashid Johnson Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth

Rashid Johnson?The Broken Five (detail)?2020?Ceramic tile, mirror tile, spray enamel, oil stick, black soap, wax?250.2 x 430.5 cm Photo: Martin Parsekian FAD magazine
Rashid Johnson?The Broken Five (detail)?2020?Ceramic tile, mirror tile, spray enamel, oil stick, black soap, wax?250.2 x 430.5 cm Photo: Martin Parsekian © Rashid Johnson Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth

Johnson updates the visual language of his long-established Anxious Men in new works as part of his Anxious Red Paintings series, which began as drawings made during and in reaction to the global lockdown, leading Johnson to produce expansive oil paintings. Using oil on linen and a blood red medium for the first time to depict the deceptively crude archetypal faces, Johnson has captured the ‘life and death’ urgency that has separated and connected communities around the globe. This red pigment, entitled Anxious Red, was created specially by Johnson for these paintings. The opacity and slippery texture of the medium itself brings a mobility to the works: a nod to the importance of movement and gesture within Johnson’s oeuvre. Just as Johnson selects his typical materials and tools – such as shea butter and black soap – for the importance of their historical narratives, here he has chosen to use the canonically significant, and universally recognisable, medium of oil paint in order to communicate his message all the more urgently. As Johnson himself says, ‘this body of works does not hide from its ambition to be understood’. As such, his Anxious Red Paintings can be read as history paintings for our times.

FAD magazine Rashid Johnson?The Broken Five?2020?Ceramic tile, mirror tile, spray enamel, oil stick, black soap, wax?250.2 x 430.5 cm Photo: Martin Parsekian
Rashid Johnson?The Broken Five?2020?Ceramic tile, mirror tile, spray enamel, oil stick, black soap, wax?250.2 x 430.5 cm Photo: Martin Parsekian © Rashid Johnson Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth

A new large-scale bronze sculpture by Rashid Johnson, ‘Stacked Heads’ (2020) will also be installed at Hauser & Wirth Somerset, made up of two imposing, black patinated busts standing ten feet tall and brimming with plants. Johnson will also display a participatory installation and sound work entitled ‘Rashid Johnson: Stage’ at MoMA PS1, New York, from 17 September 2020 – Fall 2021, drawing on the history of the microphone as a tool for protest and public speaking and its significance in hip-hop lyrics from the 1980s to the present.

Rashid Johnson. Waves at Hauser & Wirth London 6th October – 23rd December 2020

Rashid Johnson (b. 1977)?Anxious Red Painting August 20th?2020?Oil on linen?239.1 x 305.1 x 5.1 cm Photo: Martin Parsekian JOHNR106494-hires.jpg Rashid Johnson?Anxious Red Painting August 13th?2020? FAD MAGAZINE
Rashid Johnson (b. 1977)?Anxious Red Painting August 20th?2020?Oil on linen?239.1 x 305.1 x 5.1 cm Photo: Martin Parsekian JOHNR106494-hires.jpg Rashid Johnson?Anxious Red Painting August 13th?2020? © Rashid Johnson Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth

About the artist

Johnson’s multidisciplinary practice spans sculpture, painting, drawing, filmmaking, and installation, incorporating a diverse range of materials and objects, significant in their engagement with African-American and other African diasporic communities. His work explores themes of art history, individual and shared cultural identities, personal narratives, literature, philosophy, materiality and critical history.
To date, Johnson has incorporated materials and items as diverse as CB radios, shea butter, literature, record covers, gilded rocks, black soap and tropical plants. Many of Johnson’s works convey rhythms of the occult and mystic: demonstrating his desire to transform and expand each included object’s eld of association in the process of reception.

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