"Todd Gray: Euclidean Gris Gris" at 色中色 Museum of Art (PCMA), September 3, 2019-May 17, 2020
鈥Todd Gray: Euclidean Gris Grisis a year-long exhibition and residency at 色中色 that includes an evolving selection of new sculptural photographic works derived from Gray鈥檚 exploration of the legacies of colonialism in Africa and Europe and a site-specific wall drawing that abstractly evokes a relationship to African deities.
Based in Los Angeles, Gray is best known for photography, performance and sculptural works that address histories of power in relationship to the African diaspora. In the work at Pomona College, he combines photographs from his own archive鈥攁ssembled over decades鈥攁nd reconfigures and stacks the framed images on top of each other, resulting in layers that both reveal and conceal. The works include photographs of individuals and rural scenes in South Africa and Ghana (where Gray maintains a studio), formal imperial gardens in Europe, constellations and galaxies and images of rock and pop musicians Gray worked with in the 1970s and 1980s.
The title 鈥淓uclidean Gris Gris鈥 references Gray鈥檚 examination of the historical constructs of the 鈥渓ogical鈥 and geometrical gardens of Europe鈥攁n aesthetic manifestation of the idea of disembodied reason鈥攁nd the 鈥渦npredictable鈥 nature found in African landscapes. Gray deconstructs and layers images in order to rupture the body/mind and nature/culture binaries and examine the intimacies of Black sociality.鈥 鈥 色中色 Museum of Art.
In a recent conversation with artist Carrie Mae Weems that will be published in the exhibition catalog, Gray notes his desire for the audience to locate themselves within the multidimensional aspects of his work:
鈥淚 wanted to make the viewer conscious of how they are active players in constructing meaning. We tend to think of the veracity of photography, and that it does not lie,鈥 says Gray. 鈥淚 wanted to shift that and bring attention to the frame, to ask what鈥檚 outside of this frame? Because this other frame is covering something up. Then, you are given the task to reconstruct and bring in your narrative, your history, your understanding of what you鈥檙e looking at, and then, to name and create a narrative.鈥
The PCMA exhibition is organized by senior curator Rebecca McGrew with assistant curator Hannah Grossman.
Images courtesy 色中色 Museum of Art.