Research Catalog

Jeffrey Gibson : like a hammer

Title
Jeffrey Gibson : like a hammer / edited by John P. Lukavic ; [essays by Glenn Adamson, Roy Boney Jr., Anne Ellegood, John P. Lukavic, America Meredith, Jen Mergel, and Sara Raza]
Publication
Denver, CO : Denver Art Museum ; Munich ; New York : DelMonico Books·Presetel, 2018.

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StatusFormatAccessCall NumberItem Location
TextUse in library N6537.G445 A4 2018Off-site

Details

Additional Authors
  • Gibson, Jeffrey, 1972-
  • Lukavic, John
  • Adamson, Glenn
  • Boney, Roy, Jr.
  • Ellegood, Anne
  • Meredith, America
  • Mergel, Jen
  • Raza, Sara, 1979-
  • Denver Art Museum, host institution, publisher.
  • Prestel Verlag, publisher.
Description
143 pages : illustrations (chiefly color), portraits (some color); 29 cm
Summary
  • "'Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer' is the first major traveling exhibition and catalog devoted to the art of Jeffrey Gibson, who is of Mississippi Choctaw and Cherokee heritage. This mid-career survey focuses on work made since 2011, a pivotal and productive time when he fully developed his own visual language. Widely recognized as a unique and influential voice in both the contemporary art world and the Native American art world, Gibson blends aesthetics to create bold works that speak to both Native and non-Native audiences...Essays explore the role of alternative subcultures, craft, design, futurism, gender, indigenous, aesthetics, intertribal powwow culture, marginalization, materiality, personal biography, popular music, and postcolonialism in Gibson's exuberant and provocative paintings, mixed-media wall works, sculptures, and videos"--Front flap.
  • "A citizen of the Mississippi Choctaw Nation and part Cherokee, Jeffrey Gibson spent time in Germany, England, and Korea in his youth. This mix of cultures informs much of his work, which combines elements from historical and contemporary Native arts and traditions, such as powwow regalia and the use of animal skins, with those from the artistic traditions of Modernism, Geometric Abstraction, and Minimalism. As a gay Native artist, Gibson explores in his work issues of oppression and civil rights in America, as well as universal ideas of love, community, strength, vulnerability, and survival. This magnificent volume focuses on nearly 60 works completed in the last decade, including culturally adorned punching bags, three-dimensional figurative works, text-based wall hangings, painted works on rawhide and canvas, and light and video works"--Provided by publisher.
Alternative Title
Like a hammer
Subject
  • Gibson, Jeffrey, 1972- > Exhibitions
  • Indian art > North America > Exhibitions
  • Indian art > United States > 21st century > Exhibitions
  • Choctaw art > 21st century > Exhibitions
  • Cherokee art > 21st century > Exhibitions
Genre/Form
  • Exhibition catalogs.
  • Exhibition catalogs
Note
  • Published on the occasion of the exhibition "Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer," organized by the Denver Art Museum and curated by John P. Lukavic, Denver, CO, May 13 - August 12, 2018; Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, MS, October 2018 - January 2019; Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, WA, February 28 - May 12, 2019; Madison Museum of Contemporary Art, Madison, WI, June 7 - September 15, 2019.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes index and bibliographical references.
Indexed In (note)
  • Indexed in the Native American Artists Resource Collection Online, Billie Jane Baguley Library and Archives, Heard Museum, Phoenix, Arizona, at the artist name level (September 7, 2018)
Contents
Foreword / Christoph Heinrich -- Acknowledgments / John P. Lukavic -- What should have been, what is, and what will be / John P. Lukavic -- Powwow [He dreams]: Jeffrey Gibson and indigenous futurism / Roy Boney Jr. and America Meredith -- Three hot cycles / Glenn Adamson -- Artist as bricoleur: locating punk poetics in the work of Jeffrey Gibson / Sara Raza -- Jeffrey Gibson: critical exhuberance / Anne Ellegood -- "The human noise we sat there making": a conversation with Jeffery Gibson / Jen Mergel.
ISBN
  • 9783791357331
  • 3791357336
LCCN
  • 2017960016
  • 9783791357331
OCLC
  • on1039890563
  • SCSB-9135296
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library