Gallery  October 24, 2024  Carlota Gamboa

Two Major Cities Curate Community and Art at Their Joint Exhibition

Courtesy of the artist, Patron Gallery. Photo by Phillip Maisel.

Carmen Winant, Why are these our only alternatives and what kind of struggle will move us beyond them? (2021). Installation view, Makeshift Memorials, Small Revolutions, KADIST San Francisco, October 4, 2024 to February 15, 2025. 

The non-profit contemporary art organization, KADIST, in San Francisco and the Blaffer Art Museum in Houston have teamed up with joint exhibitions to examine the archival conditions of memory, ritual, and interconnectivity. The work featured in Makeshift Memorials, Small Revolutions, which ranges from site-specific installations, to external pop-ups around both cities, aims to understand what brings us together and what keeps us apart in this powerful attempt at community-building. 

Courtesy of the artists, KADIST collection. Photo by Phillip Maisel.

Installation view, Makeshift Memorials, Small Revolutions, KADIST San Francisco, October 4, 2024 to February 15, 2025. 

Presenting almost 60 artworks from more than 40 artists— many making their West Coast debut in San Francisco— the combined show highlights conversations between intersecting communities and promotes overcoming the isolative habits of a post-pandemic society. 

The dual exhibitions are also organizing multiple public programs to enhance connectivity and engage as wide an audience as possible. With an emphasis on mutual aid and the power of community support, the participating artists tackle the winding process of personal and communal healing through art-making.

In an era where so many of our daily rituals involve driving, screen-time, or capital-leaning commitments, Makeshift Memorials, Small Revolutions sets out to break those monotonous routines by reminding the collective they are part of a whole. 

Courtesy of the artist, KADIST collection. Photo by Phillip Maisel.

Saif Azzuz, still trying to piece it together (boarding school years) (2013-2022). Installation view, Makeshift Memorials, Small Revolutions, KADIST San Francisco, October 4, 2024 to February 15, 2025.

Drawing from Judtih Butler's concept of "intertwinement," curators from KADIST, Lindsay Albert, Joseph del Pesco Jo-ey Tang, and The Blaffer’s Erika MeiChua Holum aimed to explore the notion that acting collectively is in and of itself a form of revolution that sustains liberation. 

Interspersed throughout the show is the theme of grief paired with the spiritual perseverance born out of support, and though that string can be found in individual work exhibited, each artist has chosen a different subject and medium to translate the overarching themes through. 

Courtesy the artist, KADIST collection.

Brook Andrew, This year, missing witness...(2020). 

Brook Andrew, for example, used their multidisciplinary practice to collage newspaper clippings of tragedy, photographs of natural disasters, science journal articles, and manuscript pages to create a choir of lineage. The topics which Andrew focuses on are not easy realities to face, but the media archive on display does more than just proliferate fear and despair. 

By physicalizing the history of activism, hope is also rendered in the process. The work encourages viewers to continue a fight for visibility in a time when positivity can feel like a limited resource. 

Created during the outbreak of COVID-19, Andrew’s piece intended to recreate the immersion of the 24-hour news cycle, paired with the urgency of climate change and human rights. Despite a media machine that is obsessed with the portrait of catastrophe, Andrew’s work also brings people together, to make the viewer aware of both historical and contemporary communities who are constant in their efforts to reach tangible solutions. 

Courtesy the artist, KADIST collection.

Kaylene Whiskey, Kaylene TV (2020), video still. 

Indira Allegra is another artist whose focal point lies in the collusion of material and archive. Their piece is a five minute recorded performance that delves into the reckoning of life after loss. Once the divorce is finalized, once the money is gone, once the doctor calls back, what then? 

Courtesy of the artist, KADIST collection. Photo by Phillip Maisel.

Jeneen Frei Njootli, casino chips fall out of you, broken hearts and baggies too (2021). Installation view, Makeshift Memorials, Small Revolutions, KADIST San Francisco, October 4,2024 to February 15, 2025. 

Entitled After My Death / A Mutable Decision (2021), Allegra is seen attempting to explore the liminal space of reconstructing oneself after total destruction. By dancing in the available shafts of sunlight that enter an empty studio, the artist culminates the movement practice in the embodiment of grief expressions. 

Allegra has also collaborated with local Houston musicians for a live soundscape piece that will be later featured at the entrance and exit of KADIST San Francisco. Transforming the Blaffer’s stairwell into a percussion studio, Allegra aims to weave multiple senses together in order to embody the unseen forces of healing.

Buenos Aires-based artist Eduardo Navarro also embraces healing in his animationBreathspace (2020). Played from a screen in the window facing out onto the street, a breathing head is seen expanding and contracting. Paired with the soundbite of the artist's own focused breathing, a viewer is invited into the emotional space and conceptualization of the show before even physically entering.

About the Author

Carlota Gamboa

Carlota Gamboa is an art writer based in Los Angeles.

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