DAVE MCKENZIE
SCREEN DOORS ON SUBMARINES
April 24 – June 15, 2008
Opening reception: Wednesday, April 23, 6 – 9pm
Conversation between Dave McKenzie and Rodney McMillian, 6:30pm
(Roy and Edna Disney CalArts Theater)
Through video, performance, sculpture and installation, Dave McKenzie explores notions of public space and cultural exchange in relation to the private self. Often informed by humble actions and everyday circumstances, his modest proposals examine the world around us, revealing a larger set of social and political truths that are evidenced in the everyday. McKenzie’s diverse practice presents a quiet but critical model for engagement, one that poetically examines our dependence upon prescribed social roles and responsibilities while contemplating the place of the individual within this particular moment in time.
In a recent project entitled I’ll Be There (2007), McKenzie distributed a pre-printed day planner noting his whereabouts for the coming year and offering his audience opportunities to meet him at specified locations, dates, and times. He elaborates: “I am trying to make myself available without regard to outcome. Whether they decide to meet me or not is almost secondary.” Through this series of open-ended acts, he contemplates the potential he holds as an individual to bring about change, encourage dialogue, and forge new meaning.
For his exhibition at REDCAT, McKenzie presents a major body of work—consisting of new painting, sculpture and video—that expands upon his thinking about the individual’s relationship to the social body. He considers how we are shaped by the political events around us and, as individuals, negotiate the larger constructs of political, national or social identity. In this context, McKenzie also examines his own practice, revisiting past works as a form of exchange between his own thinking and public response. This is McKenzie’s first solo exhibition in Los Angeles.
Born 1977 in Kingston, Jamaica, Dave McKenzie graduated from the University of the Arts in Philadelphia and participated in residencies at the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, P.S.1 National Studio Program and the Studio Museum in Harlem. He presented solo exhibitions at the Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston; Small A Projects, Portland; Gallery 40000, Chicago; and Savage Art Resources, Portland. His work has also been included in Performa 07, New York; Freestyle, Studio Museum in Harlem; Queens International, Queens Museum of Art; 24/7, Contemporary Art Centre, Vilnius; and Listening to New Voices, P.S.1 Contemporary Art Center. In 2005, McKenzie was the recipient of the William H. Johnson Prize and the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation Award. He lives and works in Brooklyn.
This exhibition is made possible in part by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts. The Standard Downtown is the official hotel of REDCAT.
Upcoming
Lecture by Eyal Weizman
May 6 | 8pm
Eyal Weizman talks about the architecture of exclusion, violence and control in the occupied territories of the Middle East. Using architecture as an “arena of speculation” about possible futures of Palestine, Weizman deals with how Israeli settlements and military bases can be reused, recycled or re-inhabited by Palestinians, at the moment that it is unplugged from the military and political powers that charge it. Weizman lives and works in London.
Admission to the gallery is always free
Gallery hours: noon-6 pm or intermission, closed Mondays
Visit www.redcat.org or call +1.213.237.2800 for more information
REDCAT
631 West 2nd Street
Los Angeles, CA 90012 USA