Saris form a vision of a homeland in Museum of Women in the Arts exhibit | Featuring Suchitra Mattai
The Washington Post
October 8, 2024
By Mark Jenkins
When introducing viewers to her Indian heritage, Suchitra Mattai is also reconstructing it for herself. The title of the multidisciplinary artist’s ambitious National Museum of Women in the Arts exhibition, “Myth From Matter,” encapsulates her process. Mattai repurposes Indian artifacts — often old saris — to weave a vision of her ancestral homeland.
Wendy Red Star Is Decolonizing the Art World With Humor—and Help From Her Ancestors
Harper's Bazaar
October 4, 2024
By Ariana Marsh
Upon exiting the parking lot at Tippet Rise Art Center in Fishtail, Montana, visitors follow a path up a small ridge, which soon gives way to a painterly panorama of soft valleys, jagged mountains, and the region’s infamously vast sky. There, stamped across the landscape, as if to claim it as its own, is a blood-red fingerprint the size of a giant’s. Its swirls and ridges are encased within glass that is anchored to a rough granite rock, and on sunny days, the sculpture glitters and glows, as if charged from beyond by the very ancestors it honors
Wendy Red Star is Named a 2024 MacArthur Fellowship Recipient
MacArthur Foundation
October 1, 2024
Roberts Projects congratulates Wendy Red Star who is a recipient of the 2024 MacArthur Fellowship.
The fellowship is awarded to talented individuals who have shown extraordinary originality and dedication in their creative pursuits and a marked capacity for self-direction.
Luke Agada was Once a Veterinarian. Now, His Art Focuses On the Anatomy of Adaptation
Cultured Magazine
September 25, 2024
Interview by Katie Kern
Luke Agada opens his first Los Angeles show at Roberts Projects on Sept. 28. It wasn't exactly a clear path for him to arrive here, growing up in Lagos and studing veterinary medicine before finding his way to painting. Below, CULTURED sat down with the artist to talk about the question of home, certain colors becoming a safe haven, and the painters he turns time and again for inspiration.
Wendy Red Star Now Represented by Roberts Projects
September 24, 2024
Roberts Projects is honored to announce representation of Wendy Red Star (Baaeétitchish – Does Things Well). This announcement follows the gallery’s first solo exhibition of Red Star’s work – Bíikkua (The Hide Scraper) – this past August.
Wendy Red Star, of the Piegan clan and from the district of Pryor, engages in a multidisciplinary artistic practice grounded in the history and cultural knowledge of the Apsáalooke (Crow) people. Raised on the Crow reservation in Montana, her work reflects her deep connection to her community, culture, and land.
Suchitra Mattai: Myth from Matter
National Museum of Women in the Arts
September 20, 2024 - January 12, 2025
Combining richly colored textiles, found objects, beads, and more, multidisciplinary artist Suchitra Mattai (b. 1973, Georgetown, Guyana) explores themes of history, identity, and belonging. The forces that lead certain stories to be remembered, or forgotten, are central to her art. Drawing on her Indo-Caribbean roots, Mattai weaves together personal narratives, collective mythologies, and colonial history. Her two- and three-dimensional works offer a reimagined vision of the past that centers the perspectives of women and people of color, especially those from Southeast Asia.
Giants: Art from the Dean Collection of Swizz Beatz and Alicia Keys | Featuring Kehinde Wiley
The High Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA
September 13, 2024 – January 19, 2025
Musicians, songwriters, and producers Swizz Beatz (Kasseem Dean) and Alicia Keys have stood as giants in the global cultural landscape for decades. As collectors, the Deans have lived their ethos of “artists supporting artists,” acquiring a world-class collection of paintings, photographs, and sculptures by diverse, multigenerational artists.
Artist Wendy Red Star Pays Homage to Her Ancestors With Hundreds of Paintings on View in Los Angeles
Cultured Magazine
August 16, 2024
By Sara Roffino
For her current show, “Bíikkua (The Hide Scraper),” at Los Angeles’s Roberts Projects, Wendy Red Star stepped back from the humor that often carries through her work. Instead she dug into the Apsáalooke history of bishkisché, traditional leather pouches, to share a little-documented history of her people. Bishkisché were functional objects used to transport goods through the Great Plains. They were also creative expressions, meticulously designed and painted by Apsáalooke women and passed down through generations as keepsakes.
Sleep! | Featuring Lenz Geerk
Kunsthal KAdE, Amersfoort, Netherlands
August 24, 2024 - January 1, 2025
The exhibition Sleep! at the Kunsthal KAdE takes you on an exploration into the deep landscape of sleeping and dreams, through the eyes of some fifty visual artists and designers. Here, for a moment, another time reigns. The viewer experiences the four sleep stages from slumber and light rest, deep sleep and (sleep) walking through the dream to the great hall where the bed is central. “Did you sleep well?” is a question that is often asked to each other. A basic question in which the response of the person questioned immediately provides insight into the alertness, mood and ability to put things into perspective of the person in question. Sleeping is, just like eating and drinking, a basic necessity of life. Magazines are full of tips & tricks for a good night's sleep every week: with the golden rule of rest, cleanliness and regularity recurring as an ideal form of sleep hygiene.
These Black female painters use fashion to celebrate heritage, pride, and power | Featuring Wangari Mathenge
Art Basel
August 6, 2024
By Stephanie Sporn
For centuries, painters have taken creative liberties when depicting their sitters’ attire, whether for sheer visual impact or to imbue their works with symbolic significance. This phenomenon, in which the artist doubles as stylist, has been the subject of recent solo shows, including exhibitions on Gilded Age master, John Singer Sargent, and purveyor of contemporary cool, Barkley L. Hendricks. Today, a new generation of sartorially savvy artists are leading the charge, capturing clothing to stunning effect – but rather than merely painting fashion, these women consider style as a means to convey notions of heritage, pride, and power.
Suchitra Mattai On Trusting In Your Art and In Your Process
The Creative Independent
August 7, 2024
Interview by Eva Recinos
"I think being an artist is something you know that you are, and you might not recognize it for a long time because I think there are these preconceived ideas about what it is to be an artist and engaging in a professional practice. But the thing is, as we all know, it’s super complicated to be an artist. How do you have the time to make all the work? How do you fund the work? How do you grow your practice? These are all things that, when I was younger, seemed like a mystery. I think if you just trust in the art and the process, that is the only thing you can control. And the other things fall into place. I know that sounds maybe silly, but I do feel like whatever limited time you have, whatever resources you have—if you use that time to make, and to make your work better, and to develop new ideas and curiosities, that’s super important too."
For Suchitra Mattai, Materials Are Vessels of Cultural Memories
Observer
August 5, 2024
Interview by Elisa Carollo
In “she walked in reverse and found their song" at ICA SF, Mattai examines the power of memory in the creation of personal stories.
Cultural artifacts are vessels of collective memories: symbolic elements that a community can identify with to find a sense of belonging and some of the most powerful statements on the status of a specific society. With a labor-intensive practice drawing from her Indo-Caribbean lineage, artist Suchitra Mattai creates works that evoke, preserve and translate traditions passed through generations, using the potentialities of materials to reactivate forgotten or erased histories and memories.
Otis Kwame Kye Quaicoe Will Be Stopping to Smell the Flowers
Elephant Magazine
July 22, 2024
By Maria Vogel
In Otis Kwame Kye Quaicoe's most recent body of work, figures engage in one of the most physically taxing activities available–boxing. For Quaicoe's birthplace of Accra, Ghana, the sport symbolizes much more than its renowned physicality; It’s a commonly walked upon path whose success can be the very thing that provides expulsion from the cycles of poverty present in Ghanian villages. Following his own trajectory that took him away from Accra, the artist now resides in Portland, Oregon, a place where his recommendations of favorite haunts take on a much more relaxed stance than his latest paintings.
Wendy Red Star: Stirs Up the Dust
Autry Museum of the American West
July 6, 2024 - June 21, 2026
Wendy Red Star is known for photographing herself within elaborately constructed scenes, engaging the viewer directly and foregrounding her presence within narratives of her own design. In Stirs Up the Dust, from a series of celestial couture garments titled Thunder Up Above, Red Star reimagines the regalia associated with powwow, a circular dance celebration found throughout Indigenous Plains cultures including Red Star’s Crow Nation, in futuristic terms.
Figuration, abstraction and the politics of representation | Featuring Amoako Boafo
Burlington Contemporary
July 5, 2024
By Gabriella Nugent
The rise of figuration since the mid-2010s has been coterminous with the art world’s attempt to become more inclusive. Not only have there been increased demands for ‘women artists’ in the context of the #MeToo movement that began in 2017, but the global Black Lives Matter protests in 2020 galvanised the appeals for decolonisation – that is to say, the expansion of collections beyond white artists typically from Western Europe and North America. In this context, public and private institutions have depended on figurative art to demonstrate, in quite a literal way, that they are being more equitable. This trend has developed in parallel across institutions and the art market: since the mid-2000s, there has been a growth in sales of figurative painting, which subsequently has been bolstered by an institutional embrace.
Suchitra Mattai: Bodies and Souls
Tampa Museum of Art
June 22, 2024 - March 16, 2025
The exhibition Suchitra Mattai: Bodies and Souls explores migration, matriarchy, and materiality. Mattai uses found objects, such as vintage saris, to create colorful monumental installations. She wraps, braids, stitches, and weaves fabrics together as allegories for historical and personal narratives. For her first museum exhibition in Florida and the Southeast, Mattai will premier new installations in conversation with recent works, highlighting the artist’s ongoing investigations of the past and present.
On Stands Now | Lenz Geerk
Harper's Magazine
June 21, 2024
Lenz Geerk, Beach Couple V is featured in the July issue of Harper's Magazine. Accompanying author Dan Piepenbring reviews of Rosalind Brown’s debut novel Practice (Farrar, Sraus and Giroux), Yoko Tawada’s novel Paul Celan and the Trans-Tibetan Angel (New Directions), and Private Spaces in Public Places (John Hopkins University Press).
Image featured: Lenz Geerk, Beach Couple V, 2021, acrylic on canvas. © Lenz Geerk, image courtesy of the artist and Roberts Projects, Los Angeles, California.
Suchitra Mattai | she walked in reverse and found their songs
Institute of Contemporary Art San Francisco
June 5 - September 15, 2024
Suchitra Mattai was born in Georgetown, Guyana, and immigrated to Canada as a young child. The history of her ancestors—brought from India to work as indentured laborers in Guyana—deeply influences her practice. Using techniques passed down through generations, she weaves materials marked by the past into a collective story of migration and gendered labor. In this exhibition Mattai turns inward, examining the power of memory in the creation of her own stories: sometimes factual, sometimes fantastical, with divergent pieces collapsing and combining into something new.
Suburbia: Building the American Dream | Featuring Ed Templeton
Center of Contemporary Culture of Barcelona, Spain
March 20 - September 8, 2024
"Suburbia. Building the American Dream" draws us into the imaginary of the idyllic family home and shows how this lifestyle has been sold and promoted by fiction and the entertainment industry. The exhibition goes back to the origins of residential neighbourhoods in the early nineteenth century, explains how they developed massively in the 1950s, and reviews the economic, political and social context of their relentless expansion across the United States.
Kehinde Wiley: A Maze of Power
Museum of Black Civilisations, Dakar, Senegal
May 15 - June 30, 2024
Roberts Projects is delighted to announce Kehinde Wiley: A Maze of Power at The Musée des Civilisations noires (Museum of Black Civilizations) in Dakar, Senegal. Initiated in 2012, the unprecedented series explores the staging of power through the lens of African heads of state. The portraits reflect the distinctive cultural elements of each state, thus highlighting the immense diversity of the African continent, and reveal the identity of an individual through the double prism of the artist and his model.
Betye Saar Remains Guided by the Spirit
The New York Times T Magazine
May 8, 2024
By Evan Nicole Brown
The American assemblage artist Betye Saar spent her childhood salvaging lost, discarded and forgotten things, like small glass beads, broken necklaces and scraps of colored paper left in trash bins or littering the ground where she walked. Born in 1926, she was raised during the Great Depression and so, Saar wrote to me recently, she was taught to “use it up, wear it out, make it do or do without.”
Toward the Celestial: ICA Miami’s Collection at 10 Years | Featuring Betye Saar
Institute of Contemporary Art Miami
May 3 – November 1, 2024
On the occasion of its tenth anniversary, ICA Miami presents “Toward the Celestial,” a selection of works from its permanent collection highlighting the museum’s programmatic development, as well as recent commissions and previously unshown works. The exhibition is organized thematically, and journeys from microscopic to macroscopic images in order to explore the dimension of time and orders of scale. The exhibition’s title alludes to Betye Saar’s Celestial Universe (1988) banner, which was featured in the artist’s 2021 survey and has been part of installations of the artist over multiple decades suggesting both imminent presence and the recording of time through alternative ideological structures.
Cerebral Women Podcast Features Luke Agada
Cerebral Women Podcast
May 1, 2024
Interview by Phyllis Hollis
Nigerian artist living and working in Chicago. Examines themes of globalization, migration and cultural dislocation within the framework of a postcolonial world. MFA in Painting and drawing from School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2023. Teaching Fellow at the Painting and Drawing Department at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, IL. Recently named a 2024 Breakout Artist by NewCity Magazine.
Art Seeks Enlightenment in Darkness | Featuring Kehinde Wiley
The New York Times
April 24, 2024
By Jori Finkel
To enter Kehinde Wiley’s show An Archaeology of Silence is to step into darkness, where only the art itself seems to emit light. The space feels somewhere between a crypt and a cathedral, featuring paintings and bronze sculptures of reclining Black bodies, spread out in repose or entombed like corpses, that appear to glow from within.
The show, now at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, culminates with a monumental sculpture of a fallen man on horseback, draped over the horse as if he had just been shot, his Nikes dangling below the saddle. Made in the year after George Floyd was killed by the police in Minneapolis, this monument—and more broadly, the show as a whole—confronts the “legacy and scope of anti-Black violence,” according to Darren Walker, president of the Ford Foundation.
The Hirshhorn took its modern art treasures out of the vault. It’s a joy | Featuring Amoako Boafo
The Washington Post
April 10, 2024
Review by Kriston Capps
From Grandma Moses to Rashid Johnson, “Revolutions” spans a ludicrous range of painters. Right from the start, the show dials up the contrasts: The first works to greet viewers are a stately 1884 portrait by society painter John Singer Sargent hanging next to an electric 2020 portrait by Ghanaian star Amoako Boafo.
Roughly speaking, these works could serve as chronological capstones for the Hirshhorn’s collection. But there’s something else to this pairing: It’s an unlikely diptych that tees up the push-and-pull between figuration and abstraction that defines the collection — and the century.
Betye Saar Is Making Some of the Best Work of Her Life
The New York Times
April 5, 2024
Interviewed by Guy Trebay
"The main challenge, I guess, to being an artist is how to make a living. But being a creative person means you have to find ways to do this. I studied design at U.C.L.A., and after I graduated, I made greeting cards, I made jewelry, I got into printmaking and then sold my prints. I taught art classes in colleges all over the states. My creativity kept evolving with my needs as I got married and bought a house, had my daughters and put them through college. Through it all, I loved making art. It kept me going."
Suchitra Mattai | We are nomads, we are dreamers
Socrates Sculpture Park, Queens, NY
May 11, 2024 – August 25, 2024
We are nomads, we are dreamers is a solo exhibition of newly commissioned works by Suchitra Mattai, celebrating the migratory oceanic journeys of past, present, and future diasporic communities. Inspired by the Park’s position along the East River, which flows into the vast expanse of the Atlantic Ocean, Mattai’s installation features a series of monumental, soft sculptures made from vintage saris. Activated by monthly dance performances, this exhibition pays homage to the artist’s Indo-Caribbean ancestors and the stories of many Queens residents.
Betye Saar’s Stellar Installation
Frieze
January 15, 2024
By Stephanie Seidel
Celestial bodies, constellations and zodiac signs feature prominently in the work of American artist Betye Saar. Through ritual acts, she assembles syncretic spaces that incorporate spiritual, autobiographical and politically charged elements foraged from flea markets and the annals of history.
Betye Saar | Drifting Toward Twilight
The Huntington Library, Art Museum, and Botanical Gardens, San Marino, CA
November 11, 2023 – November 30, 2025
Renowned American artist Betye Saar’s large-scale work “Drifting Toward Twilight”—recently commissioned by The Huntington—is a site-specific installation that features a 17-foot-long vintage wooden canoe and found objects, including birdcages, antlers, and natural materials harvested by Saar from The Huntington’s grounds. The commission is personal for Saar, who has fond memories of visiting The Huntington as a child and of the trees and landscape in her north Pasadena neighborhood.