Exhibition

Remy Jungerman: Brilliant Corners

Fridman Gallery, New York , United States
07 Apr 2021 - 15 May 2021

Horizontal Obeah KANGAA II, 2020. Cotton textile, kaolin (pimba), tar, beats, yarn, acrylic, wood (yellow poplar, plywood). 
23.6 x 17.3 x 2.8 in. (60 x 44 x 7 cm). Photography: Aatjan Renders. Courtesy of the artist and Fridman Gallery, NY

Horizontal Obeah KANGAA II, 2020. Cotton textile, kaolin (pimba), tar, beats, yarn, acrylic, wood (yellow poplar, plywood). 23.6 x 17.3 x 2.8 in. (60 x 44 x 7 cm). Photography: Aatjan Renders. Courtesy of the artist and Fridman Gallery, NY

Fridman Gallery announces the first major solo exhibition in the United States of Remy Jungerman, whose works explore the intersection of pattern and symbol in Surinamese-Maroon culture, the larger African Diaspora, Jazz, and 20th Century Modernism.

The exhibition will include the artist’s new body of work, featuring wall-based panels and sculptural assemblages of textiles and clay. Covering bold geometric-patterned fabric used in the (Afro-Surinamese) Winti religion with the white kaolin clay incorporated in many traditions throughout the African diaspora, Jungerman carves grid lines into the clay, at once obscuring and revealing the underlying patterns of the textile. The resulting surfaces are delicate, tactile, and layered, recalling the low-toned rhythms of the Agida (a long narrow drum used in Winti practice), and the switched key releases, silences, hesitations, and harsh percussive touch of Thelonius Monk.

By placing textile, clay, beads, and nails (featured in Congolese Nkisi Nkondi power sculptures), in direct contact with patterns and forms drawn from established Europe-centric art traditions, Jungerman presents a peripheral vision that does reparative justice to oversimplified perspectives on art history. With a nod to Mondrian’s “Neoplastic Jazz” and Monk’s seminal album Brilliant Corners, Jungerman deepens the hyper-current questions regarding an overdue paradigm shift in cultural heritage while also bridging aesthetic and spiritual energies.

Alongside the exhibition, in the downstairs media room, the gallery will present a film, Visiting Deities (1962), by the Dutch anthropologist Bonno Thoden van Velzen. The film features the Ndjuka, a Maroon tribe from the area where Jungerman was born. He is a descendant, on his mother’s side, of the Maroons who escaped enslavement on Dutch plantations to establish self-governed communities in the Surinamese rainforest.

Jungerman attended the Academy for Higher Arts and Cultural Studies in Paramaribo, Suriname, before moving to Amsterdam where he studied at the Gerrit Rietveld Academy. In 2019, Jungerman co-represented (with Iris Kensmil) The Netherlands in the 58th Venice Biennale. In November 2021, Jungerman will be the subject of a solo exhibition at the Stedelijk Museum.

fridmangallery.com/brilliant-corners

 


All content © 2024 Contemporary And. All Rights Reserved. Website by SHIFT