All posts tagged: Pope.L

Gladstone Gallery Now Represents the Estate of Pope.L

Gladstone Gallery Now Represents the Estate of Pope.L

Gladstone Gallery now represents the estate of Pope.L, the boundary-crossing artist whose performances and conceptual art left an indelible mark on contemporary art. The gallery will mount its first solo show for the artist in 2027 in New York. Gladstone will represent Pope.L with Modern Art in London and Vielmetter Los Angeles, which both represented the artist at the time of his death in December 2023. (At that time, Pope.L was also represented by Mitchell-Innes & Nash, which closed its New York space the following June.) Related Articles “Pope.L was a ground-breaking visionary artist in his lifetime,” Gladstone partner Gavin Brown said in a statement, “and since his untimely death, his vast impact and influence have come into higher relief and only continue to grow. We feel so privileged at Gladstone to be a part of continuing his legacy.” Over the course of four decades, Pope.L produced a body of work that was often hard to classify, but that at its core dealt with the experience of Black Americans. His most well-known performances involved him …

I Saw a Great Show in China That Would Be Censored in the US

I Saw a Great Show in China That Would Be Censored in the US

In a famous photograph of W.E.B. Du Bois with Mao Zedong, both men are absolutely giddy and dressed to the nines: big smiles, stylish hats, long wool coats. That picture—and the 20th-century Afro-Asian alliances it symbolizes—was something of an impetus for “The Great Camouflage,” a show on view at the Rockbund Art Museum in Shanghai through April 26. Co-curators X Zhu-Nowell and Kandis Williams began with a shared interest in overlapping revolutionary histories and cross-cultural solidarities. It started out as a show about racial capitalism and the role Marxist thought played in anti-imperialist movements—and those are still key themes. But along the way, the curators came across the work of so many women whose contributions, in art and in activism, were overshadowed by the men they married, among them Shirley Du Bois, Eslanda Robeson, Amy Ashwood Garvey, Suzanne Césaire, and Grace Lee Boggs. A project about race and class quickly came to focus on gender, placing Black feminist thought at the fore. Related Articles Nearly all the women invoked here were activists, but also artists: …