Stephanie Syjuco: Dodge+Burn,asurveyexhibitionofworkfrom2004 - present
On view March 9 – May 4, 2024
Opening reception: Saturday, March 9 from 1-3pm; remarks at 2pm
San Francisco: Catharine Clark Gallery announces the opening of StephanieSyjuco:Dodge+Burn, a survey exhibition of over 20 years of work by the acclaimed cross-disciplinary artist. On view March 9 – May 4, 2024, Syjuco ’s exhibition encompasses both the North and South galleries as well as the Media Room. Visitors to this presentation will have the opportunity to engage with several important projects originally commissioned by institutions, such as Dodge and Burn (Visible Storage) (2019) and Double Vision (2021), which are being presented on the West Coast for the first time. The gallery hosts an opening reception on Saturday, March 9, 2024, from 1-3pm (remarks at 2pm).
Syjuco’s exhibition also coincides with release of the artist’s first monograph, Stephanie Syjuco: The Unruly Archive, published by Radius
Books in Spring 2024 with artwork and texts by Syjuco, and essays by Astria Suparak, Carmen Winant, Gelare Khoshgozaran, Jason Lazarus, LJ Roberts, Minne Atairu, Pio Abad, Savannah Wood, and Wendy Red Star. Syjuco’s monograph is the second title in a new series of publications focused on work by Asian American artists; the gallery will host a special release celebration in May 2024 (details to be announced; pre-order here).
Stephanie Syjuco (b. 1974, Philippines; lives in Oakland, California) works in photography, sculpture, and installation, moving from handmade and craft-inspired mediums to digital editing and archive excavations. Her projects leverage opensource systems, shareware logic, and flows of capital to investigate issues of economies and empire. Recently, she has focused on how photography and image-based processes are implicated in the construction of racialized, exclusionary narratives of American history and citizenship. Syjuco is frequently invited by museums and special collections to respond to materials held within their archives. Stephanie Syjuco: Dodge + Burn features work conceptualized in response to research conducted at the Smithsonian Institutions, Amon Carter Museum of American Art, and the Missouri Historical Society, among other venues. Her exhibition reflects the breadth of Syjuco’s investigation into the history of image-making and its relationship to the white gaze.
The focal work in the exhibition is Dodge and Burn (Visible Storage) (2019), a monumental platform-based sculpture first presented at Syjuco’s solo museum exhibition Rogue States at the Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis (also 2019). Conceptualized in dialogue with Syjuco ’s platform work Neutral Calibration Studies (Ornament + Crime) (2016) – which debuted in Syjuco ’s 2016 solo exhibition of the same name at Catharine Clark Gallery – Dodge and Burn (Visible Storage) collapses images and objects referencing American colonialist expansion in the Philippines during the early 1900s, as well as contemporary racial politics and historical amnesia. Archival research of the 1904 St. Louis World’s Fair collides with contemporary protest imagery, political references, and textiles. Chroma key green, traditionally deployed in digital video post-production, is used in intricate handsewn garments, backdrops, and props, including a 19th Century American dress, MAGA hats, tiki torches, and artificial houseplants. The allusion to postproduction and image manipulation is a direct reference to the creation of an American narrative that is itself a problematic construction. Dodge and Burn (Visible Storage) was previously presented in Syjuco’s solo museum exhibitions at the Blaffer Art Museum (The Visible Invisible, 2020) and the MSU Broad Art Museum (Blind Spot, 2023); the
Stephanie Syjuco: Dodge + Burn features a reimagined presentation of Syjuco’s Double Vision, originally commissioned by the Amon Carter Museum of American Art in 2021 and currently on view in the exhibition Cowboy at the MCA Denver. In this installation, Syjuco reconstituted the Western landscape as seen in canvases by the 19th century painters (particularly Charles Russell and Frederic
Remington) largely responsible for crafting a perception of the West as a site of open, lustrous expanse. Reflecting on this project, curator Miranda Lash writes: “Syjuco took that context as her starting point and created a vibrant, immersive environment inspired by paintings from the Amon Carter Museum ’s collection along with largescale photographs of bronze sculptures by Frederic Remington from this same era. The photographs include details of the art preparators’ gloves and tools, and collectively speak to the imagemaking of the institution. The West, Syjuco seems to argue, was invented not only by the artists but also by the structures and systems of the museums that commission, conserve, and collect their work.” 1
The exhibition also includes an excerpt of Syjuco’s 2021 project Shutter/Release, originally realized for the traveling museum exhibition Undoing Time: Art and Histories of Incarceration and currently on view in Going Dark: The Contemporary Figure at the Edge of Visibility at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York. In this series, Syjuco continued to intervene with the photographic archive generated from late 19th and early 20th-century practices of anthropology in the Philippines that characterized indigenous peoples as racially inferior. Some photographs stem from Bilibid Prison in Manila established by the Spanish colonial government in the late 19th-century, an institution maintained during the Japanese Occupation (1942 - 1945) which still imprisons more than 25,000 people since 2017. Curator Matthew Miranda writes that “Syjuco uses the ‘healing brush’ in Photoshop, a function that duplicates the ambient pixels on a point conventionally used for the purposes of ‘retouching’ blemishes and unsightly obstructions. Instead of erasure, she co-opts the photographic tool to remove or 'liberate' the pictured bodies from their carceral and colonial environments. The artist mounts the 'healed' image on aluminum metal producing spectral traces of silhouettes and uninhabited landscapes destabilizing the perceived fixity of history.” Syjuco writes that “my own body, sitting in the
of
while at the same time acknowledging that the images still remain.” Join us for an opening reception on Saturday, March 9, 2024, from 1-3pm (artist’s remarks at 2pm).
Stephanie Syjuco (b. 1974, Philippines; lives in Oakland, California) works in photography, sculpture, and installation, moving from handmade and craft-inspired mediums to digital editing and archive excavations. Her projects leverage open-source systems, shareware logic, and flows of capital to investigate issues of economies and empire. Recently, she has focused on how photography and image-based processes are implicated in the construction of racialized, exclusionary narratives of American history and citizenship. She is the recipient of numerous awards, including a 2014 Guggenheim Fellowship Award, a 2020 Tiffany Foundation Award, and a 2009 Joan Mitchell Painters and Sculptors Award. She was a Smithsonian Artist Research Fellow at the National Museum of American History in Washington DC in 2019-20 and is featured in the acclaimed PBS documentary series Art21: Art in the Twenty- First Century.
Born in the Philippines, her family emigrated to the United States when she was a child. Syjuco received her BFA from the San Francisco Art Institute and her MFA from Stanford University. Her work has been widely exhibited and has been the subject of several solo museum presentations, including: Stephanie Syjuco: Blind Spot at the MSU Broad Art Museum, East Lansing, Michigan (catalogue); Stephanie Syjuco: White Balance/Color Cast, Anderson Collection at Stanford University, California; Stephanie Syjuco: Double Vision, Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, Texas; Stephanie Syjuco: Image Trafficking, Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art, Hartford, Connecticut; Stephanie Syjuco: The Visible Invisible, Blaffer Art Museum, Houston, Texas; and Vanishing Point (Overlay), Baltimore Museum of Art, Baltimore, Maryland.
Syjuco’s work is featured in Going Dark: The Contemporary Figure at the Edge of Visibility at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York, October 20, 2023 – April 7, 2024. In January 2024, her work is included in the exhibition Don’t Forget to Call Your Mother opening January 11, 2024, at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. In June 2024 Syjuco will open a solo museum exhibition with a catalogue at the Frye Art Museum in Seattle. In Spring 2024, Radius Books will publish Stephanie Syjuco: The Unruly Archive, an artist book conceptualized by Syjuco. Catharine Clark Gallery will present a solo survey exhibition with Syjuco, which will encompass the entire gallery, on view March 9 – May 4, 2024.
Her work has been collected by institutions such as the Museum of Modern Art, New York, New York; The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, New York; J. Paul Getty Museum of Art, Los Angeles, California; Los Angeles County Museum of Art, California; Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, California; Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco, California; Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.; Walker Arts Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota; Milwaukee Art Museum, Wisconsin; Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia; Saint Louis Museum of Art, Missouri; MSU Broad Art Museum, East Lansing, Michigan; and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, California, among others.
A long-time educator, Syjuco is an Associate Professor of Sculpture at the University of California, Berkeley. She has worked with Silverlens Gallery since 2023, exhibited with RYAN LEE Gallery since 2013, and has been represented by Catharine Clark Gallery since 2008.
Stephanie Syjuco, Dodge and Burn (Visible Storage), 2019 Wooden platform, digital photos and printed vinyl on lasercut wood, chromakey fabric, printed backdrops, seamless paper, artificial plants, mixed media. Installation photography by Dusty Kessler.
Overall: 204 x 240 x 96 inches
$250,000
Stephanie Syjuco, Set-up (The Outlaw), 2021
Framed pigment prints on Hahnemühle Baryta.
Editions of 3 + 1AP; 1/3
Sheet: 48 x 34 inches;
Frame: 48 1/16 x 34 1/16 inches. $15,000
*Also available in 72 x 52 inches. POR.
Editions of 3 + 1AP; 3/3
Sheet: 48 x 34 inches; Frame: 48 1/16 x 34 1/16 inches $22,000
*Also available in 72 x 52 inches. POR.
Stephanie Syjuco, Set Up (The Rattlesnake), 2021
Framed pigment prints on Hahnemühle Baryta.
Editions of 3 + 1AP; 1/3
Sheet: 48 x 34 inches; Frame: 48 1/16 x 34 1/16 inches
$15,000
*Also available in 72 x 52 inches. POR.
Editions of 3 + 1AP; 2/3
Sheet: 48 x 34 inches; Frame: 48 1/16 x 34 1/16 inches
$15,000
*Also available in 72 x 52 inches. POR.
Stephanie Syjuco, Applicant Photos (Migrants) #3, 2013-2017
Pigmented inkjet print
Edition of 10 + 2AP; 2/10
Sheet: 3 3/5 x 4 1/5 inches; Frame: 20 x 16 inches
Last edition available. $7,500
Full suite of three photographs: $20,000
Stephanie Syjuco, Neutral Orchids (Phalaenopsis + Dracaena sanderana 2), 2016
Pigmented inkjet print
Edition of 10 + 2AP; 3/10
Sheet: 32 x 24 inches; Frame: 33 x 25 inches
Unframed: $7,500; Framed: $8,500
Stephanie Syjuco, Neutral Orchids (Phalaenopsis, small), 2016
Pigmented inkjet print
Edition of 10 + 2AP; 8/10
Sheet: 20 x 15 inches; Frame: 20 3/4 x 15 3/4 inches
Unframed: $7,500; Framed: $8,500
Pigmented inkjet print on Photo Rag Baryta
Edition of 15 + 3AP
Sheet 30 x 22 1/2 inches; Frame: 30 1/2 x 23 inches
Unframed: $12,500; Framed: $13,500
Edition
2AP
Sheet: 30 x 24 inches; Frame: 31 x 25 inches
Framed: $12,000
Edition
Sheet: 33 x 26 inches; Frame: 34 x 27 inches
Framed: $22,000
Edition of 10 + 2AP; 2/10
Sheet: 3 3/5 x 4 1/5 inches; Frame: 20 x 16 inches
Last edition available. $7,500
Full suite of three photographs: $20,000
Stephanie Syjuco, Applicant Photos (Migrants) #2, 2013-2017
Pigmented inkjet print
Edition of 10 + 2AP; 2/10
Sheet: 3 3/5 x 4 1/5 inches; Frame: 20 x 16 inches
Last edition available. $7,500
Full suite of three photographs: $20,000
Edition of
Sheet: 32 x 24 inches;
Framed: $16,000
Edition of 10 + 2AP; 4/10
Sheet: 24 x 18 inches; Frame: 24 5/8 x 18 5/8 inches
Unframed: $5,000; Framed: $6,000
Edition of 3 + 2AP;
Sheet: 48 x 36 inches; Frame: 48 5/8 x 36 5/8 inches
Framed: $30,000
$5,800
$5,800
$5,800
$5,800
$5,800
$5,800
$5,800
$5,800
$5,800
Framed: $12,000
47 x 56 inches
Framed: $12,000
$75,000
$75,000
$75,000
$75,000
$3,500
Stephanie Syjuco, full installation of RAIDERS, 2011, in the exhibition Dodge + Burn, 2024 at Catharine Clark Gallery, San Francisco. Digital archival photo prints mounted onto lasercut wood, hardware, crates. Mixed edition. Dimensions variable. Full installation: $45,000
$8,500
Dimensions variable.
$8,500
$7,000
Open Edition
Dimensions variable
Each: $250
Edition
Sheet:
Framed: $12,000
Stephanie Syjuco, Chromakey Aftermath 1 (Flags, Sticks, and Barriers), 2019 Pigmented inkjet print Edition of 8 + 2AP; 4/8
Sheet: 24 x 36 inches; Frame: 26 x 38 inches
Framed: $10,500
Stephanie Syjuco, Chromakey Aftermath 2 (Flags, Sticks, and Barriers), 2019
Pigmented inkjet print Edition of 8 + 2AP; 4/8
Sheet: 24 x 36 inches; Frame: 26 x 38 inches
Framed: $10,500
VIDEO WORKS
Edition of 3 + 2AP
5:09 minutes looped
Edition 2: $18,000
Edition 3: $20,000
$15,000
3:09 minutes looped $10,000
Stephanie Syjuco, Dazzle Print Bandanna
Two tone Dazzle Print on cotton Print will vary from images shown as printing is random and no two bandannas are identical. Made in San Francisco by Open Editions.
20 x 20 inches
Each: $24
Stephanie Syjuco, Lossy Artifacts (RIPs), 2016
Dye-sublimation print on poly-poplin
Edition 1+1AP
Dimensions variable; installation measures 128 x 124 inches
Full set: $14,000
$7,000
$2,800
$2,800
Stephanie Syjuco: The Unruly Archive 2024
Radius Books
StephanieSyjuco:TheUnrulyArchive is the artist’s first monograph, weaving together her research-based practice with a substantial array of visual source material. Bound in a unique format with different types of paper, the pages are cut and layered to simulate the process of physically excavating folders in an archive.
Artist talk and book signing on May 4, 2024 from 1 – 3 PM in EXiT at 248 Utah St, San Francisco, CA, 94103
Buy now through EXiT