Obsequies at AA|LA Gallery

Artists: Aria Dean, Hamishi Farah, Sean Kierre-Lyons, Redeem Pettaway, Ralph Pugay, Adriana Ramić, Bunny Rogers, Ser Serpas

Exhibition title: Obsequies

Curated by: manuel arturo abreu

Venue: AALA Gallery, Los Angeles, US

Date: July 21 – August 25, 2018

Photography: all images copyright and courtesy of the artists and AA|LA Gallery

to peek thru radiant logo
put screwdrivers inside, boil them
until they finally fit in thimbles
The wind weeps like the rapture of a refrigerated
volcano

*

ad-laced fragments of memory
In your eyes the reflection
of a god unlearning her past
by now there are strange shadows
that move where once lonely footsteps
performed the dance that cried for heaven.

*

The near-homophony of “obsequies” (funeral ceremonies) and “obsequious” (bootlicking, sycophantic compliance) invokes a relationship between assimilation and mourning. Consider Hortense Spillers’ argument that commemorative space without criticality can easily normalize violence in its celebration of the “resilience” of oppressed people. Or consider the injunction to “respect the dead,” even if they don’t deserve respect.

Institutional memory mines the personal funereal to justify dominant narratives in an ongoing violent revisionism. Tears become a kind of national discursive fuel, and mourning can engender both stasis (inactivity, quietism, equilibrium) and resistance (entropic tendencies, creative destruction, service to the ineffable). One can be paralyzed by sorrow or radicalized, faced by the ineffable void of time and the failure of language it engenders as we grieve the world as it is, what was lost, and what could be.

We see traces of the ineffable void of history in the burn marks in Aria Dean’s monochrome canvas work, as well as in the performative abstraction of Ser Serpas’ drawings. Sean Kierre-Lyons’ whip, fashioned from the artist’s hair, parodies the libidinal economy of white fears of Black retaliation. Redeem Pettaway’s painting, Arranged Death (2017), evokes predestination and the tyranny of linear time in relation to family — two angelic figures gaze upon an intimate scene of mourning with the inscription “Anno Domini” above, signifying the standstill of the event even as the clock on the wall infinitely ticks forward. Ralph Pugay’s painting of a group of cows wearing glowsticks mourns the artist’s failed attempt to perform landscape painting via cow rave.

Adriana Ramić’s work, 1 May 1980 (after Leo Ramić), is a takeaway print based on an ASCII drawing of Yugoslavian leader Tito, which her father printed and distributed the day before the leader’s death. Immediately afterwards, the police came around, paranoid and suspicious of the correlation between the generated image and Tito’s death. Please feel free to take home one of the printouts.

-manuel arturo abreu

AALA is pleased to present obsequies, an exhibition curated by manuel arturo abreu, featuring works by Aria Dean, Hamishi Farah, Sean Kierre-Lyons, Redeem Pettaway, Ralph Pugay, Adriana Ramić, Bunny Rogers, and Ser Serpas. The opening reception on July 21, 2018 will feature poetry readings by Ser Serpas, Aria Dean, Redeem Pettaway, and abreu.

Adriana Ramić, 1 May 1980 (after Leo Ramić), 2018, Dot-matrix print on continuous green-bar, computer paper, 14.8 x 12 inches

Sean-Kierre Lyons, Lil’ bad trini bitch but she mixed with China, 2017, Artist’s hair, loc clips, 108 x 1 inches

Ralph Pugay, Sunset Cruise, 2018, Acrylic on canvas, 16 x 20 inches

Aria Dean, Untitled (Canvas #5), 2018, Warm and natural cotton batting, stretcher bars, 72 x 90 inches

Hamishi Farah, The Manager, 2016, Acrylic on linen, 29.95 x 39.75 inches

Redeem Pettaway, Arranged Death, 2017, Acrylic on canvas, 108 x 72 inches

Ralph Pugay, Beeloved, 2017, Acrylic on canvas, 12 x 9 inches

Ralph Pugay, Cattle Rave, 2013, Acrylic on canvas, 25 x 22 inches

Adriana Ramić, 1 May 1980 (after Leo Ramić), 2018, Dot-matrix print on continuous green-bar, computer paper, 14.8 x 12 inches

Bunny Rogers, Demigod, 2013, Printed fleece blanket, 24 x 18 inches, Produced for Appendix project space fundraiser

Ser Serpas, Untitled, 2018, 11.25 x 9.5 inches, Paper, ink, plastic sleeve