[By Appointment] Mildred Howard: A Survey, 1978-2020
1326 South Boyle Avenue
Saturday, August 15 at 12:00 PM 6:00 PM
Ends Sep 26, 2020
Visit the Virtual Gallery: https://www.galleriesnow.net/shows/mildred-howard-a-survey-1978-2020/ Parrasch Heijnen is pleased to present the gallery’s first exhibition with Oakland, CA-based artist Mildred Howard. Howard’s expansive oeuvre addresses the universal themes of racism and injustice directly and without hesitation; her work considers these themes through the lens of language, objects, and imagery that unfolds and reveals itself upon closer inspection. The works in this exhibition exemplify the range of materials Howard has used throughout her career, including fiber, blown glass, printmaking, found objects, photo collage, painting, and installation. Howard’s early works, which often include objectified depictions of her own body, explore the African diaspora, focusing on identity and relationships to nature. Some of these pieces trace the histories of migrant families like her own, and feature personal memorabilia and found objects stitched together. In the late 1970s, Howard began experimenting with colored Xerox machines–then an exciting, new technology–creating collages and self-portraits by positioning images and real objects together on the scanner bed to form high-contrast and saturation impressions. Memories are central to Howard’s work: she responds to personal experiences and expands outward, paying homage to past lives. The installation Ten Little Children Standing in a Line (One Got Shot, and Then There Were Nine) (1991), for example, was created in response to the 1976 massacre of schoolchildren in Soweto, South Africa. The Soweto Uprising occurred during an otherwise peaceful protest lead by schoolchildren against the Apartheid policy to teach only in Afrikaans, the language of oppression, rather than in English. (Official reports state between 176 and 700 people murdered, with 4,000 injured–in contrast to the six stated in the initial AP newswire.) Howard recalled her reaction to news of the event, exclaiming, “These could be my kids. We are all affected by racism!” Pleasing to behold, the wall-based element of Ten Little Children Standing in a Line, installed in the form of an expanding grid, emits the disarming illusion of balance and order. Upon closer inspection of the components comprising this work, however, the viewer sees that the grid is made of thousands of used bullet casings. In this work and others, Howard aims to draw out discomfort and unease from the viewer with the hope that a collective motivation to challenge forces of power within society will follow. The playful, rounded glass figures of Parenthetically Speaking...It's Only a Figure of Speech (2010) were conceived of in response to Quincy Troupe’s poem “At the End,” wherein punctuation is pointedly employed to denote the passing of time and power of memory. Howard highlights how punctuation controls the flow of language, and dictates the way in which a reader stops, pauses, or moves forward. A literal play on words–though words are absent–Parenthetically Speaking embodies Howard’s ongoing investigation of interpretation and questioning. The sculpture You Are Welcome Here (2020) is made from an assortment of found glass bottles and wooden posts that form a hybrid structure: a combine featuring elements adopted from Joseph Eichler’s modernist architecture and a model of slave quarters. Eichler was notably one of the first architects who did not discriminate against homeowners on the basis of ethnicity, class, or religion– a rare and revolutionary act in the 1940s and ‘50s. Howard also cites a passage from James Weldon Johnson’s Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man, wherein the narrator encounters vari-colored glass bottles that appear to grow from the ground. The glass bottles in this structure–spirit catchers meant to ward away evil–illuminate the interior of the space; they simultaneously protect the house as a shrine of memories and render it susceptible to intrusion. Howard’s conceptually-driven assemblages depict the human experience and the anthropological quest for knowledge. Her work is deeply personal yet universal. In positioning each individual experience as one element of a larger, collective history, Howard re-defines and contextualizes this shared identity, expelling stereotypes by taking hold of ideas and rendering them powerless. ------------------------------ Mildred Howard: A Survey, 1978 - 2020 will be on view at Parrasch Heijnen Gallery by advance appointment only. The gallery has secure, private parking onsite. We will provide a doors-open, socially distanced experience to safely welcome you to view this exhibition. Gallery staff are also available to guide you through our exhibitions virtually via Zoom. For more information, please contact the gallery at +1 (323) 943-9373 or info@parraschheijnen.com
  • Curate LA Partner