SculptureCenter is pleased to announce Cosmic Voodoo Circus, an exhibition of new work by Sanford Biggers
commissioned through SculptureCenter's Artist in Residence program.
Merging modern and post-modern strategies with vernacular forms, Biggers
studies and posits historical and contemporary subjectivity as a fluid
and multivalent concept. Cosmic Voodoo Circus is curated by Mary Ceruti, SculptureCenter's Executive Director and Chief Curator, and will be on view September 10 - November 28, 2011. An opening reception will take place Saturday, September 10th, 5-7pm and is open to the public.
In Cosmic Voodoo Circus, Biggers exploits the carnival aesthetic
to address profound issues of identity, the power of objects, as well as
spiritual and cultural transmigration. At the center of Biggers'
installation is a new video titled Shake, the second part in an
odyssean trilogy about the formation and dissolution of identity. Shot
in Brazil with a Creative Time travel grant, Shake follows
Ricardo Castillo, a Brazilian-born, Germany based, choreographer, clown,
stuntman and DJ, through a transformative journey from the ocean
through the favelas, to a colonial palace eventually returning to
the sea as an androgynous silver-skinned figure. (The first video in
the trilogy, Shuffle, will be on view at the Brooklyn Museum of Art, beginning September 23, 2011 as part of Sanford Biggers: Sweet Funk - an Introspective.)
The installation will also feature several new sculptures including an
empty trapeze swinging overhead like a pendulum, a suspended sculpture
based on a pair of African spirit sculptures constructed from fabrics
including seersucker and quilts, and a billboard sized minstrel-like
toothy grin, a recurrent image in Biggers' work.
Sanford Biggers works across disciplines and cultures creating
sculpture, video, photography, music and photographs. Incorporating
icons and rites ranging from Japanese mandalas and slave quilts to hip
hop and YouTube music culture, Biggers' work connects the signifiers and
patterns that link African spiritualism, Buddhist sacred rituals, and
African-American urban culture. Biggers has been included in several
notable exhibitions including Prospect 1/ New Orleans Biennial, Illuminations at the Tate Modern, Performa 07, the Whitney Biennial and Freestyle
at the Studio Museum in Harlem. He has also had solo exhibitions at
Santa Barbara Contemporary Arts Forum, Santa Barbara; Grand Arts, Kansas
City; Triple Candie, New York; Contemporary Art Museum, Houston; and
Matrix/University of Berkeley Museum, Berkeley. A solo show will open at
Mass MOCA in December 2011. Born in Los Angeles, Biggers currently
lives in New York and is an Assistant Professor in the Visual Arts
Department at Columbia University.
For additional information or images, please contact Frederick Janka
at 718.361.1750 x117 or press@sculpture-center.org