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15 Mar 2012

Kehinde Wiley at The Jewish Museum, NY


Kehinde Wiley, Alios Itzhak (The World Stage: Israel), 2011, oil and gold enamel on canvas.
The Jewish Museum, New York; Purchase: Gift of Lisa and Steven Tananbaum Family Foundation;
Gift in honor of Joan Rosenbaum by the Contemporary Judaica, Fine Arts, Photography, and Traditional Judaica
Acquisitions Committee Funds, 2011-31.
© Kehinde Wiley. Courtesy Roberts & Tilton, Culver City, CA..

Kehinde Wiley/The World Stage: Israel
The Jewish Museum
http://www.thejewishmuseum.org/exhibitions/kehinde-wiley

Info

March 9 - July 29, 2012 Sat, Sun, Mon, Tues, Fri 11 am -5:45 pm Thurs 11 am - 8 pm

Contact

info@thejm.org

212-423-3200
212-423-3232

Address

http://www.thejewishmuseum.org/exhibitions/kehinde-wiley
The Jewish Museum
1109 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10128
USA

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The Jewish Museum will present Kehinde Wiley/The World Stage: Israel, from March 9 through July 29, 2012.
The exhibition features 14 large-scale paintings from the contemporary American painter Kehinde Wiley's newest series, The World Stage: Israel. The vibrant portraits of Israeli youths from diverse ethnic and religious affiliations are each embedded in a unique background influenced by Jewish ceremonial art. Also included are 11 works - papercuts and large textiles – chosen by the artist from The Jewish Museum's collection. All 14 paintings are being displayed in New York for the first time.

A new acquisition by Wiley (born 1977, Los Angeles) served as impetus for the exhibition. The painting, Alios Itzhak (2011), is a nine-foot tall portrait of a young Jewish Ethiopian-Israeli man surrounded by an intricate decorative background inspired by a traditional Jewish papercut in the Museum's collection.

Wiley says his appropriated decorative backgrounds serve as catalysts for his paintings. The paintings represent a unique fusion of contemporary culture with European traditions and those of North Africa and the Middle East. Roughly two-thirds of the portraits in the Israel series are of Ethiopian Jews, others are of native-born Jews and Arab Israelis. The artist is driven by an ongoing exploration of globalization, diasporas, cultural hybridity, and power. Saying he knows what it feels like to exist on the periphery, Wiley likes to catapult often powerless, anonymous young men of color onto enormous canvases and into the visual language of the powerful. The large size of the paintings reflects Wiley's observation that scale has been used as a measure of historical importance throughout art history.

The artist-designed and hand carved wooden frames created for The World Stage: Israel paintings combine imagery of the hands of Kohen (the blessing hands of a Kohen - a descendant of the high priest, Aaron) and the Lion of Judah (symbolizing power and majesty, often represented in symmetrical, confronting pairs of lions) each supporting a text in Hebrew. For Wiley's Jewish subjects the text shown is the Ten Commandments; for his Arab Israeli subjects, the plea of Rodney King, victim of a 1991 police beating in Los Angeles that sparked race riots, 'Can we all get along?'

One of the most significant young artists working today, Kehinde Wiley is originally from Los Angeles and currently lives and works in Beijing, Dakar and New York. A gifted painter, he takes everyday people and paints them often larger than life-size in the grand poses of nobles, saints and colonial rulers from classical European portraiture. While the body language is borrowed from the past, the clothes are current and often hip-hop in style. The idea is to endow status on his young, urban subjects from carefully chosen spots around the globe. Rich tapestries of color and pattern form the bright and ornate backgrounds from which the young men posture. Patterns are found in the decorative traditions of each culture Wiley has chosen for his World Stage series. The fifth in the series, Israel, was recently completed with 14 of the 18 paintings in the set on view in The Jewish Museum's exhibition. Prior sites for Wiley's ambitious series have been China, Africa, Brazil and India/Sri Lanka. To find his subjects – almost always young, black and male – he goes to places the hip and young hang out.

Kehinde Wiley
received a BFA from San Francisco Art Institute in 1999, and a MFA from Yale University in 2001. His paintings are in over forty museum collections. Selected exhibitions include The National Portrait Gallery, Brooklyn Museum, and The Studio Museum in Harlem, among others. His work has been the subject of eight monographs to date, with a forthcoming Rizzoli publication scheduled for release in March.

On Thursday, March 15 at 6:30 pm, The Jewish Museum will present Kehinde Wiley in conversation with Lola Ogunnaike, a pop culture authority and a Today Show contributor. Program tickets are $15, general public; $12, students and 65+; and can be ordered from www.TheJewishMuseum.org/wileyprograms or by calling 212.423.3337.