Ja'Tovia Gary
Tactile Cosmologies
02 Feb - 23 Mar 2019
JA'TOVIA GARY
Tactile Cosmologies
2 February - 23 March 2019
galerie frank elbaz is happy to present Tactile Cosmologies, the gallery’s first solo exhibition of artist and filmmaker Ja’Tovia Gary.
Western convention has incorrectly taught us that seeing is believing.
Seeing could be believing if our visual grammars were not loaned to us by whiteness, a never positively articulated thing —the shape-shifting deceptive but all too real thing that exists primarily because of what it is not. Because what is seeing? Gazes are unreliable. Seeing is the split second visual process of meaning making within which we ascribe taught definitions of things to those things. Taught definitions, prefabricated ideas both old and new.
This meaning-making is an objective-subjective process. There are objects whose meanings “cannot” be changed —and there are other subjects whose meanings are constantly in flux, whose subjectivities are impossible to fully recognize because they are fundamentally incompatible with these fixed and unyielding grammars. It is colored by chattelization, meaning cruelly affixed to the epidermis. The democratization of image-making through photography is praiseworthy, but is one’s image not rendered worthless if one is unable to impose one’s own intended meaning? We would do well to trace the camera’s invention to 1492: the Atlantic Ocean was the first camera obscura.
This is the urgency of the oft auto-theoretical (and so always sousveillant) process of image creating (and of being, or while being) in the wake. It is a simultaneously desperate and deliberate act to reanimate the archive that acts as your own burial ground. Producing your own container by grafting materials like memories and ontologies and wounded flesh is to harness the anarchic power of assemblage-making. Creating this bricolage and making widely legible this anti-Black chaos can be ugly and difficult to abide, but it is the embrace of this gendered fugitive act and tradition of this quilting that is birthing blackness.
Ja’Tovia Gary’s work is a million and one things as she delicately harnesses these violences as her antidote to the full-bodied assault on and continuous disciplining of Black womanhood. (Because we do not need to [re]traumatize to liberate). The Giverny Document is an erotic work in the way that we are reminded by Audre Lorde that love and acts of love are born of chaos, just as the primordial mother Yemaya springs forth from Olokun’s cavernous, oceanic abyss.
The show is called Tactile Cosmologies, a phrase conceived by feminist thinker and historian Hortense Spillers. In the vein of deployments of sonicity and sonority that allow us to listen to images and afford subjects opportunities for self-fashioning, Ja’Tovia considers haptics as her modality for a coveillant self —and world— making that defiantly gazes out as it is (conscious of being) gazed upon. Her work embodies a closeness and quietude —her weapons of choice— juxtaposed against the brutality of being forced to embody terror. Touch is an offering of care that forms the interstitial connective tissue that nurtures community and empathy, and refuses the scripted, controlling, and pathological toughness demanded of Black women’s lives and labor.
—Zoe Samudzi
Ja'Tovia Gary (born in 1984 in Dallas, TX; lives and works in Brooklyn, NY)
Ja’Tovia M. Gary is an artist and filmmaker currently living and working in Brooklyn, New York. Gary’s work seeks to liberate the distorted histories through which Black life is often viewed while fleshing out a nuanced and multivalent Black interiority. Through documentary film and experimental video art, Gary charts the ways structures of power shape our perceptions around representation, race, gender, sexuality, and violence. The artist earned her MFA in Social Documentary Filmmaking from the School of Visual Arts in New York City.
Gary’s work is currently included in David Zwirner’s exhibition God Made My Face: A Collective Portrait of James Baldwin. Her work has screened at festivals including Frameline LGBTQ Film Festival, Edinburgh International Film Festival, New Orleans, Toronto Inside Out and Ann Arbor Film Festivals. Gary's work is part of The Whitney Museum’s permanent collection and has exhibited at cultural institutions worldwide including the Schomburg Center, NYU Florence, Goldsmiths University, MoCA LA, MoMA, The Hammer Museum, Brooklyn Museum, ICA Boston, and MoMA PS1. Her work has received support from the Sundance Institute and The Jerome Foundation. In 2016 Gary participated in the Terra Foundation Summer Residency program in Giverny, France. She was recently named one of Filmmaker Magazine 25 New Faces of Independent Filmmaking of 2017. Gary is a 2018-2019 Radcliffe Fellow at Harvard University.
Tactile Cosmologies
2 February - 23 March 2019
galerie frank elbaz is happy to present Tactile Cosmologies, the gallery’s first solo exhibition of artist and filmmaker Ja’Tovia Gary.
Western convention has incorrectly taught us that seeing is believing.
Seeing could be believing if our visual grammars were not loaned to us by whiteness, a never positively articulated thing —the shape-shifting deceptive but all too real thing that exists primarily because of what it is not. Because what is seeing? Gazes are unreliable. Seeing is the split second visual process of meaning making within which we ascribe taught definitions of things to those things. Taught definitions, prefabricated ideas both old and new.
This meaning-making is an objective-subjective process. There are objects whose meanings “cannot” be changed —and there are other subjects whose meanings are constantly in flux, whose subjectivities are impossible to fully recognize because they are fundamentally incompatible with these fixed and unyielding grammars. It is colored by chattelization, meaning cruelly affixed to the epidermis. The democratization of image-making through photography is praiseworthy, but is one’s image not rendered worthless if one is unable to impose one’s own intended meaning? We would do well to trace the camera’s invention to 1492: the Atlantic Ocean was the first camera obscura.
This is the urgency of the oft auto-theoretical (and so always sousveillant) process of image creating (and of being, or while being) in the wake. It is a simultaneously desperate and deliberate act to reanimate the archive that acts as your own burial ground. Producing your own container by grafting materials like memories and ontologies and wounded flesh is to harness the anarchic power of assemblage-making. Creating this bricolage and making widely legible this anti-Black chaos can be ugly and difficult to abide, but it is the embrace of this gendered fugitive act and tradition of this quilting that is birthing blackness.
Ja’Tovia Gary’s work is a million and one things as she delicately harnesses these violences as her antidote to the full-bodied assault on and continuous disciplining of Black womanhood. (Because we do not need to [re]traumatize to liberate). The Giverny Document is an erotic work in the way that we are reminded by Audre Lorde that love and acts of love are born of chaos, just as the primordial mother Yemaya springs forth from Olokun’s cavernous, oceanic abyss.
The show is called Tactile Cosmologies, a phrase conceived by feminist thinker and historian Hortense Spillers. In the vein of deployments of sonicity and sonority that allow us to listen to images and afford subjects opportunities for self-fashioning, Ja’Tovia considers haptics as her modality for a coveillant self —and world— making that defiantly gazes out as it is (conscious of being) gazed upon. Her work embodies a closeness and quietude —her weapons of choice— juxtaposed against the brutality of being forced to embody terror. Touch is an offering of care that forms the interstitial connective tissue that nurtures community and empathy, and refuses the scripted, controlling, and pathological toughness demanded of Black women’s lives and labor.
—Zoe Samudzi
Ja'Tovia Gary (born in 1984 in Dallas, TX; lives and works in Brooklyn, NY)
Ja’Tovia M. Gary is an artist and filmmaker currently living and working in Brooklyn, New York. Gary’s work seeks to liberate the distorted histories through which Black life is often viewed while fleshing out a nuanced and multivalent Black interiority. Through documentary film and experimental video art, Gary charts the ways structures of power shape our perceptions around representation, race, gender, sexuality, and violence. The artist earned her MFA in Social Documentary Filmmaking from the School of Visual Arts in New York City.
Gary’s work is currently included in David Zwirner’s exhibition God Made My Face: A Collective Portrait of James Baldwin. Her work has screened at festivals including Frameline LGBTQ Film Festival, Edinburgh International Film Festival, New Orleans, Toronto Inside Out and Ann Arbor Film Festivals. Gary's work is part of The Whitney Museum’s permanent collection and has exhibited at cultural institutions worldwide including the Schomburg Center, NYU Florence, Goldsmiths University, MoCA LA, MoMA, The Hammer Museum, Brooklyn Museum, ICA Boston, and MoMA PS1. Her work has received support from the Sundance Institute and The Jerome Foundation. In 2016 Gary participated in the Terra Foundation Summer Residency program in Giverny, France. She was recently named one of Filmmaker Magazine 25 New Faces of Independent Filmmaking of 2017. Gary is a 2018-2019 Radcliffe Fellow at Harvard University.