"Mark Bradford Is Our Jackson Pollock: Thoughts on His Stellar U.S. Pavilion at the Venice Biennale," by Andrew Goldstein, artnet News
The most important thing about 鈥檚 bravura, deeply felt presentation for the Venice Biennale鈥檚 United States pavilion is that the bright spotlight of the occasion reveals him to be that thing America can use right now: a new Very Important Artist.
In fact, you could even say that Bradford is our 鈥攁nd not just because his well-known process of machine-sanding layers of street posters to make an abstract painting mimics Pollock鈥檚 technical invention of the 鈥渄rip.鈥 (The Affichistes, Jacques Vill茅gl茅 and Raymond Hains, already went down that path in the 1960s.) Instead, Pollock鈥檚 real groundbreaking contribution was bringing a whole other category of endeavor鈥攖he whole theatrical performance of 鈥渁ction鈥濃攊nto painting, expanding the medium鈥檚 very definition in a way that鈥檚 influenced countless artists. Bradford is doing that too, expanding painting by bringing social practice into his artist鈥檚 studio by tying his work as a painter specifically to his work with foster children and other at-risk communities.
鈥淲hen I say the artist is a citizen, I have interest in politics and communities, but it鈥檚 still under the umbrella of being an artist,鈥 Bradford said at the opening ceremony for his pavilion. Over the years, he has used his clout as a market star to support numerous social causes in his hometown of Los Angeles, focusing this work through his nonprofit organization Art + Practice. He has sold artworks at auction to raise the hundreds of thousands of dollars to fund these projects. He has also incorporated materials related to his causes, such as street ads for services鈥攗surious lenders, for instance鈥攖hat prey on the unfortunate, into his paintings. 鈥淚 like to pull information from the world, material from the world,鈥 he says.
In Venice, as an adjunct to his pavilion, he has pledged to provide funding over six years for Rio Ter脿 dei Pensieri, a local prison cooperative that teaches practical job skills to inmates. Consider it site-specific social work. For him, art is 鈥渘ot just what happens in the hermetically sealed studio, and it鈥檚 not what happens in the communities鈥攊t鈥檚 something in between.鈥
This positioning is critical to understanding what Bradford set out to do with his U.S. pavilion. Also critical is his personal background. Today, Bradford is comfortable in the corridors of power and wealth, and unhesitant to speak his mind, but his upbringing as a young gay black man in America was that of a quintessential outsider. 鈥淭he sissy flower landed on my shoulder when I was six,鈥 Bradford says. 鈥淧eople called me a sissy, which meant that you wouldn鈥檛 be protected by the herd鈥. My mother told me, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e going to need to find a way to navigate across that schoolyard, but I鈥檓 always going to be there for you.鈥欌
The notion of what it means to navigate as an outsider, as a gay black man in America, is the central conceit for Bradford鈥檚 pavilion. For the artist, the Palladian building itself, with its striking similarities to Thomas Jefferson鈥檚 Monticello, stands for White American Government. As a result, you don鈥檛 enter the pavilion through the grand front door, as usual; you enter through the side door, like one of Jefferson鈥檚 slaves (or, until relatively recently, any black person in the South) would.
Inside the first room, a giant red-and-black papier-m芒ch茅 tumor-like sculpture hangs from the ceiling and literally marginalizes the visitor, forcing him to navigate around it by clinging to the walls. It鈥檚 meant to also represent Hephaestus鈥檚 club foot, citing the myth of the Greek blacksmith god鈥檚 maiming expulsion from Olympus, but the pavilion鈥檚 mythic overlay of gods and medusas鈥攊ncluding the poem inscribed outside the entrance鈥攊s best understood as a way of tapping into the universality of ancient lore to intensify and exalt Bradford鈥檚 core themes of community. It鈥檚 a bit silly, and best taken lightly.
In the next room, there is a central painted-and-bleached-paper abstract sculpture of a medusa鈥檚 head surrounded by three weighty, gorgeous paintings of minimalistic black-and-white patterns that Bradford made by dipping hair-salon endpapers into a mixture of hair dye and paint and imprinting them onto canvas. Named after classical sirens, they are each dedicated to an important woman in the artist鈥檚 life, beginning with his mother, in whose hair salon Bradford famously and consequentially worked for years.
(The other two are named for different women in the artist鈥檚 life, which involves a 鈥渟ad story,鈥 said Christopher Bedford, the pavilion鈥檚 curator and director of the Baltimore Museum of Art; when later asked who the women were, Bradford grew uncharacteristically taciturn and dismissed the question, saying of the work, 鈥淧eople like to make it more narrative than it is.鈥)
Leaving this room behind, you enter the pavilion鈥檚 rotunda, which posed the greatest challenge to Bradford because he sees it as representing the most official, governmental space in the building, and therefore his opportunity to address his perspective on his country鈥檚 government. In the inaugural remarks, interim US ambassador to Italy Kelly Degnan praised the opening as a wonderful occasion for 鈥減eople who love art, and that includes the United States government鈥濃攄rawing skeptical murmurs from the crowd, considering who is presently in charge鈥攁nd said it was a 鈥済reat privilege鈥 to support Bradford in representing the country.
The artist, on the other hand, is emphatic that he does not intend to represent the United States government in Venice: 鈥淚鈥檓 black, but just because I鈥檓 black doesn鈥檛 mean I鈥檓 representing the whole black race,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 believe in a univocal representation of nationhood either. That鈥檚 impossible. That鈥檚 not what I鈥檓 about.鈥
So how did Bradford tackle the rotunda? He peeled the plaster from the walls, obscured the skylight, and affixed ropes of painted-and-bleached black-and-gold paper up on the ceiling, transforming the space into an eerie ruin, reminiscent of both Angkor Wat and a foreclosed home, with a distinctly submerged feel. (Fans of 鈥淪tranger Things鈥 may be reminded of the Upside Down.)
Bradford described it as being 鈥渓ike a grotto where you can come and then get out your rage and frustration at what鈥檚 happening.鈥 Ropes of paper are tied into grotesque naval knots on the walls, symbols of the Middle Passage. Its unfinished state suggests a phase of dissolution, not construction. 鈥淚t鈥檚 too soon to start talking about rebuilding, because the ground is still moving,鈥 Bradford said of the national mood. 鈥淗ow can you rebuild when the earthquake is still going on?鈥
After the rotunda, you鈥檙e greeted by a suite of supernally lovely large abstract paintings鈥攖he sanded-poster works for which Bradford is best known. They are bold, dynamic, replete with ingenious ways of marking the canvas, magisterial. Looking at their patterns, you鈥檙e alternately put in mind of operations on the cellular level and the mysteries of the cosmos. This is the way Bradford thinks in his social practice as well. He explains: 鈥淚 go between the micro and the macro, where the macro is policy change the micro is the local level. I go between helping one person and trying to change the policy.鈥
The last room, unexpectedly, is a video work. A young black man (a friend of Bradford鈥檚) walks down a Los Angeles street, a poster wrapped around a streetlamp to the right, a discarded 40 bottle to the left. Wearing a white tank-top, baggy yellow shorts, and shoes with pulled-up white socks, he alternates a noticeably sashaying gait with an occasional burst of breaking into a running jump.
For several minutes he walks down the street, but for every ten steps he takes, he seems to barely move forward鈥攊t鈥檚 as if he鈥檚 walking on a treadmill. After a few minutes, the video ends, with the protagonist only halfway down the street. It鈥檚 a poignant, personal work, skeptical of progress and used to its difficulty but exuberant and optimistic all the same. The title of the show, after all, is 鈥淭omorrow Is Another Day.鈥
鈥淚鈥檓 better at innovating than creating,鈥 Bradford says of his work, and in his pavilion you can understand what he鈥檚 getting at. His work is filled with a rough, hard-fought elegance. He鈥檚 improvising, using what鈥檚 around him, trying to make something good out of it, and that鈥檚 what makes him a great artist.