What Else Can Art Do?
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Mark Bradford is the tallest artist I know—six feet seven and a half inches, and pencil thin, which makes him look taller. His paintings, as you’d expect, run large. When I visited Bradford’s industrial-sized studio, in South Los Angeles, this spring, one wall was almost entirely covered by a huge outline map of the United States, with clusters of numbers that represented the AIDS cases reported in each state up to 2009. The map was a study for a much larger one that he planned for a wall at the Hammer Museum, in Los Angeles, where an exhibition of his new work opens on June 20th. “These are for the Hammer, too,” he said, waving toward three abstract paintings on another wall. “They’re all based on AIDS cells under a microscope. I don’t want to say the show is about AIDS, but it’s about the body, and about my relationship to the nineteen-eighties, when all that stuff hit. It’s my using a particular moment and abstracting it.”
For someone who had just spent sixteen hours on an airplane, coming back from the Sharjah Biennial, in the United Arab Emirates, Bradford seemed unnaturally well rested. He looks a decade or so younger than his age, which is fifty-three. Being tall and African-American and not playing basketball was an issue for him when he was a teen-ager, but now he’s comfortable with his height. He was wearing a white T-shirt and white painter’s pants, his working clothes, which he buys online for himself and his assistants, two of whom are from the same Mexican family. “When people see us on the street or at Home Depot, they think we’re housepainters,” he said, happily.
Most of Bradford’s art supplies come from the Home Depot. “If Home Depot doesn’t have it,” he said, “Mark Bradford doesn’t need it.” Although he hasn’t really used artist’s paints or brushes since he was in art school, what Bradford makes are abstract paintings. He starts with a stretched canvas and builds up its surface with ten or fifteen layers of paper—white paper, colored paper, newsprint, reproductions, photographs, printed texts—fixing each layer with a coat of clear shellac. Sometimes he embeds lengths of string or caulking to form linear elements in the palimpsest. When the buildup reaches a certain density, he attacks it with power sanders and other tools, exposing earlier layers, flashes of color, and unexpected juxtapositions. Not until the first sanding does he begin to see where the painting is going. He works like an archeologist, rediscovering the past. The method seems haphazard, but it’s not, and the results can take your breath away. Bradford’s 2013 painting “Shoot the Coin,” which was in a show of recent acquisitions at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art last summer, does that. Twelve feet high by twenty feet long, it appears at first to be mostly white, but as you move closer you see subtle colors, branching lines like blood vessels, printed words; move back again, and it becomes a vast winter landscape. It’s startlingly beautiful, and at LACMA its physical presence overpowered everything else in the room.
Toward the rear of the studio were two immense, unfinished paintings, the largest he’s done so far. They are for the lobby of 1221 Avenue of the Americas, in Rockefeller Center, which is undergoing extensive renovations; Bradford was commissioned to do them after winning an international competition. “I’d always wanted to do a map of New York, so I thought I’d give it a try,” he explained. “This one is upper Manhattan, and the other is lower Manhattan. I worked from a very early gridded map.” He pushed a four-wheeled hydraulic cherry picker aside so that we could get a better look. Both paintings are based on patterns of narrow rectangles, which he laid down with house paint over a gridded template; the underlying grid is visible in some areas and covered over in others. The upper-Manhattan painting looked like a night view of the city from above. Bradford refers to his work as “social abstraction”—abstract art “with a social or political context clinging to the edges”—and for this project he read books on New York history, on Harlem, on urbanism, and on the Rockefeller family (“Man, you talk about the bad and the good”). Until this afternoon, he thought he still had plenty of time to work on them, but his dealer, Iwan Wirth, had just told him that they were due in three months. This didn’t appear to concern him. “You know how it is with construction dates—there’s always some slippage,” he said. “Slippage is something I believe in, something I depend on.”
The back end of the studio space is divided up into offices, utility rooms, a kitchen, and a bathroom. Bradford said that he had hired an architect “for about twenty minutes” before giving the job to Jesus Lopez, his all-purpose contractor, the father of two of his assistants. Bradford has a second studio on the far side of an adjacent parking area; this one was empty, except for four large plastic objects piled in a corner. There was something comic about them—they looked like enormous punching bags. They were inflatable fenders (Bradford called them “buoys”) used to protect the hulls of docked cargo ships. By roughing up and collaging the surfaces of fifteen similar ones, and suspending them on heavy chains, he had turned them into sculptures for his installation at the Sharjah Biennial. But the ones he shipped never got there. “That was really intense,” he said. “Thirty-six hours before I was due to leave for Sharjah, at three o’clock in the morning, I got an e-mail marked ‘Urgent.’ Because of a strike in the port of San Francisco, the shipment had been rerouted, and my buoys were on their way to China. I put the bedclothes over my head for about ten minutes, until I remembered that I had fifteen more of them, and I could do the whole thing again and send them by FedEx. I actually liked the new ones much better. But, you know, it’s interesting that boat people haven’t found something better than these things. All those big boats that just say ‘Fuck you’ to everybody, and you’re trusting them to a piece of plastic? Really? O.K., good luck with that.”
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