The Power Plant

Coming After

Various Artists

Past Exhibition

Dec 10 2011 – Mar 04 2012

Jonathan VanDyke, Durational Performance for Two Men, 2009. Performance with dripping paint and installation of canvas, felt and wood. Courtesy the artist.

Jonathan VanDyke, Durational Performance for Two Men, 2009. Performance with dripping paint and installation of canvas, felt and wood. Courtesy the artist.


CURATOR

Jon Davies

Featuring artists from New York, Los Angeles, Berlin, Toronto, and beyond, Coming After is a response to the recent renewal of interest in the period from the mid-1980s to early 1990s that was decisive for North American cultural politics. This time period witnessed the Culture Wars, the birth of “queer” as an identity and theory, and the rise of a direct-action AIDS activist movement — epitomized by ACT UP — fighting a new plague that was devastating communities of artists, queers and people of colour. While these years were highly traumatic, they also represented a galvanizing, dynamic moment for queer citizenship — one that is arguably haunting our present and our future.

This exhibition does not focus on those artists who were, as artist Christian Holstad succinctly put it, “burying their dead” at that time, but instead those who grew up in the shadow of the crisis, whether by fate or by choice. Artist Sharon Hayes has noted, “what marks me generationally is that … it wasn’t my friends who were dying, it was the people I was just discovering, people I was just beginning to model myself after, people I longed to become.”

The artists in Coming After were primarily born in 1970 or later and share a certain queer sensibility that is in dialogue with the past in some way. Rather than melding with the consumer-culture lifestyle that has been touted as LGBT citizenship over the past fifteen years, the work evidences a sense of having come after or missed out on something. The potential represented by this very recent and more faraway radical (queer) historical moments is both an open wound and a fount of inspiration. What was lost along the way from then to now? Some works are specifically referential, while others more obliquely capture a sense of having arrived too late, a kind of knotty nostalgia or even melancholic deflation. For example, one motif in the exhibition is of spaces haunted with both historical resonance and a glimmer of future potential.

Negotiating their hope and despair about the present and future of our world in complex and compelling ways, the artists in Coming After share a sense of themselves as part of queer genealogies and cultural lineages, with influence and affinity moving across time and space.

Onya Hogan-Finlay’s project includes the parallel exhibition Lez Con at the Canadian Lesbian & Gay Archives Gallery, 34 Isabella Street, 20 January – 10 April, 2012, hours: Tuesday – Thursday, 7:30–10 PM.

Coming After will be accompanied by a publication including a curatorial essay by Jon Davies, as well as original illustrations by Logan MacDonald, special artist projects by Ulrike Müller and Jimmy Robert, a transcribed speech by Sharon Hayes and a short text by American artist Zoe Leonard.

Artists

Pauline Boudry/Renate Lorenz, Aleesa Cohene, Glen Fogel, Onya Hogan-Finlay, Christian Holstad, Danny Jauregui, Adam Garnet Jones, Jean-Paul Kelly, Tim Leyendekker, Benny Nemerofsky Ramsay, James Richards, Emily Roysdon, Dean Sameshima, Jonathan VanDyke, Susanne M. Winterling

Site-specific installation (filter, light and quotation from Funeral Rites). Courtesy the artist and Lüttgenmeijer, Berlin. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

Video installation, 13 min. Courtesy the artist. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

Vintage millinery tubing, vinyl, reflective fabric, and lamé tubing. Collection of Philip E. Aarons & Shelley Fox Aarons. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

Fluorescent lights on powder-coated steel, mp3 player, motion detector, solid state relay, variac, amplifier, speaker, and powder-coated steel chair. Courtesy the artist and Callicoon Fine Arts, New York. Photo: Toni Hafkenscheid.

Winter 2011-12 Program Guide

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About the Artists


Adam Garnet Jones

Adam Garnet Jones (Cree/Métis) is an Indigiqueer screenwriter, director, bead-worker and novelist from Edmonton Alberta.

Adam Garnet Jones Photo

Aleesa Cohene

Aleesa Cohene is a Canadian visual artist based in Los Angeles, born in 1976 in Vancouver, BC.

Aleesa Cohene Photo