Authentic Facsimiles of a Nation
January 3, 2008- February 9, 2008
Reception: January 3, 6:00 pm - 8:00 pm
539 W 23rd St
The tumultuous history of race relations in the South has
been, in large part, buried and left to fester in the years since
the Civil War. While culture is intangible and abstract, its
artifacts are available as evidence of its existence. Born in
Atlanta, Georgia and raised throughout the South, Travis
Somerville unapologetically picks at these old wounds by
exposing the popular objects and iconography of Southern culture. Somerville’s use of
imagery is complex and shaped significantly by his personal relationship to it. His critical
eye works in the shadow of his own nostalgia and consequently attempts to reconcile the
idealism of his religious upbringing with the racial and political turmoil of his past.
Somerville’s irreverent installations, paintings and
embellished photographs incorporate suggestive symbols of
the South’s troubled history such as Ku Klux Klan hoods and
Confederate flags as well as doo-rags, whiskey bottles and
images of popular advertising from the more recent past. His
graphite-on-paper portraits take their subjects from vintage
photographs and offer a more reflective side of his historical
excavation. The suggestive content, although sensitive,
attempts to unearth the complexities and contradictions in
post-antebellum society rather than condemn it. Somerville
has recently expanded on these ideas by exploring how the
contemporary concerns of the South - most salient in the
aftermath of Hurricane Katrina - stand as a metaphor for
exported racism and colonialism.
Travis Somerville has shown extensively with numerous solo and group exhibitions in
both galleries and museums. His work has been presented at, amongst others, the San
Jose Museum of Art, the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C, the Laguna Art
Museum and the university art museums of Virginia and Arizona State. He is currently
participating in “Beyond the Mountaintop” at the Wadsworth Athenaeum in Hartford, CT.
He has garnered critical attention in numerous publications including The Washington
Post, Art in America, FlashArt and The Los Angeles Times. Authentic Facsimiles of a
Nation, Somerville’s first solo exhibition with
Caren Golden Fine Art, will be on view from
January 3 through February 9, 2008.
Books and DVDs related to artists in this show| Location | | | Gallery | Caren Golden Fine Art | | Address | 539 W 23rd St New York (Chelsea) NY, 10011 United States | | Phone | 212-727-8304 | | Fax | 212-727-8360 | | Hours | Tue-Sat 11-6 | |
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