Bruce Yonemoto 2008
February 6, 2008- March 15, 2008
Reception: February 6, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
526 W 26th St
Alexander Gray Associates is pleased to present new photo-based works by Los Angeles-based media artist
Bruce Yonemoto. Continuing his ongoing research and interest in Hollywood cinema and its role in shaping
cultural identity, Yonemoto presents a group of new photographs that examine American wars, heroism, and ideas
of national building.
In the series, NSEW, Yonemoto appropriates American Civil War-era photographic portraiture. Such photographs
were precious memories of soldiers, treasured by family members on both sides of the Union, and play an important
role in documenting the Civil War. Hollywood’s representations of the Civil War shaped Twentieth-Century relationships
to race, evident in early cinematic features including D. W. Griffith’s landmark 1915 feature film, Birth of a
Nation (The Clansman), and the Victor Flemming’s 1939 epic, Gone With the Wind. These two approaches to
representation—early photography and early Twentieth-Century film—are the fodder for Yonemoto’s striking
portraits.
The photographs depict Asian-American male models posing in full Civil War regalia, dressed in uniforms rented
from Western Costume, Hollywood’s oldest rental collection that provided costumes for Birth of a Nation and Gone
With the Wind. Yomemoto’s ongoing interest in the representation of Asian-Americans in U.S. History is furthered
by the “casting” of Asians as Civil War soldiers and costuming them in uniforms and clothing representing both the
North and the South, Yonemoto raises questions about war, servitude, and ethnic and national. In fact, Chinese
immigrants fought on both sides of the Civil War, and as part of Yonemoto’s “re-enactment” with these photographs,
a third “side” of the war is formed, based on race and ethnicity, rather than political divisions or ideals. Further
questioning the visibility of Asians in American debates about race—typically codified as Black or White—the
photographs question the role of the audience identification through photography. Also at play is fetishistic nature of
current war re-enactment subcultures, and this phenomenon’s inherently sexual and racial role-playing.
Yonemoto’s work has been exhibited internationally, including individual exhibitions at Tomio Koyama Gallery,
Tokyo; Blum & Poe, Los Angeles; the Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Kansas City, MO; the Institute of
Contemporary Art, Philadelphia; the Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, OH; and the Santa Monica Museum of
Art, CA. His work has been included in numerous biennials, including the Corcoran Biennial (2002); Fukui
International Video Biennale (1993); the Whitney Biennial (1993, 1987). In 1999, the Japanese American National
Museum in Los Angeles presented a retrospective exhibition of Bruce and Norman Yonemoto’s work. Recent exhibitions
include Sounds Like the Sound of Music at the Santa Barbara Contemporary Art Forum (2008), Exile of the
Imaginary at the Generali Foundation, Vienna (2007) and In Other Words at Bard College, Center for Curatorial
Studies (2006).
Bruce Yonemoto is Professor and Chair of Studio Art at the University of California, Irvine. He is a
2008 recipient of a Creative Capital Foundation grant.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | map | | Gallery | Alexander Gray Associates | | Address | 526 W 26th St, #1019 New York (Chelsea) NY, 10001 United States | | Phone | 212-399-2636 | | Fax | 212-399-2684 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 11-6 (Summer hours: Tue-Fri 11-6; Gallery is closed to the public for the month of August.) | |
| |
|