Post Hip-Hop? or return of the Boom Bap!

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post Hip-Hop? or return of the

Luis Gispert

Yanira Collado

Sofía Córdova

N. Masani Landfair

Nathaniel Donnett

André Leon Gray

Rashawn Griffin

Lee Quiñones

Onajide Shabaka

June 8 – July 28, 2023

curated by william córdova

Boom
Bap!
WWW.SIKKEMAJENKINSCO.COM SIKKEMA JENKINS & CO. 530 WEST 22ND STREET NEW YORK, NY 10011 TEL 212 929 2262 June 8 – July 28, 2023 Post Hip-Hop? or return of the Boom Bap! Curated by william córdova

“A constant improvisation in time” — Amiri Baraka (Blues People)

Sikkema Jenkins & Co. is pleased to present Post Hip Hop?: or return of the Boom Bap!, a group exhibition curated by interdisciplinary cultural practitioner, william córdova. Participating artists include, Yanira Collado, Nathaniel Donnett, André Leon Gray, Sofía Córdova, N. Masani Landfair, Rashawn Griffin, Luis Gispert, Onajide Shabaka, and Lee Quiñones. Encompassing a diverse range of mediums and presentations, Post Hip Hop?: or return of the Boom Bap! centers around the onomatopoeic characteristics inherent to these artists’ work and the threads of sonic-visual dialogue created when exhibited collectively. Curator william córdova seeks to explore how their respective practices are shaped and informed by rhythm, syncopation, harmonic proportions, and the metaphysical concepts of musica universalis.

Polyrhythmic tones and patterns relate artist Yanira Collado and Nathaniel Donnett’s mathematical systems of improvisation to Jazz, Tango, and Merengue, all at once. Visual practitioner André Leon Gray and Sofía Córdova’s structures allude to altruistic frequencies that echo the ripples of Bomba and Salsa music. The oeuvres of visual artists N. Masani Landfair and Rashawn Griffin culminate with freestyle tones of stuttering narrative bits, analogous to the boom bap found in Nicolas Guillen’s cadenced poem, Sensemayá. Luis Gispert, Onajide Shabka, and Lee Quiñones offer more euphonic treaties akin to the Guaguancó. Echoing the clave pattern of the Cuban rumba, their works alter perceptions of the spatial and temporal with intentional modulations that strain, cascade, and reverberate. all at once the early 90s return of the boom bap!

“Cumanana cumanana, cumanana cumanana” — Victoria Santa Cruz (Cumanana)

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william córdova (b. Lima, Peru) is interested in the ephemeral visuality of transition and displacement, how objects and perception change and adapt within time and space. Utilizing a variety of materials, including reclaimed objects, paint, gold leaf, and collage, córdova’s multimedia practice weaves encoded statements on contemporary social systems, literary and musical references within the material history of objects and images. córdova graduated with a BFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago, earned an MFA from Yale University. He most recently organized Can’t Stop Won’t Stop: Meditations on Resilience (2022) at the LeRoy Neiman Center for Print Studies, which featured three print projects by córdova, Fab 5 Freddy, and Lee Quiñones in dialogue with one another and co-curated The Greenwood Centennial (2021), Tulsa, OK. His work is currently included in the group exhibition The Culture: The Culture: Hip Hop and Contemporary Art in the 21st Century at the Baltimore Museum of Art, MD. Notable solo exhibitions include on the lower frequencies i speak 4 u, at the Baltimore Museum of Art (2022), and his first major survey exhibition, now’s the time: narratives of southern alchemy at the Pérez Art Museum Miami, FL, in 2018.

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N. MASANI LANDFAIR

Born in Chicago, IL

Lives and works in Canton, GA

N. Masani Landfair employs methods of collage and assemblage to recast materials deemed worthless or undesirable. Their ideas of beauty and value are influenced by both the industrial environment of South Chicago, where they grew up, and the culture of the South, where their grandparents resided prior to the Great Migration. N. Masani Landfair’s work has been exhibited at the Museum of Science and Industry’s Black Creativity Juried Exhibition, Chicago, IL; Zhou B Art Center, Chicago, IL; 33 Contemporary Gallery, Chicago, IL; ProArts, Oakland, CA; Prizm Art Fair, Miami, FL; and the San Francisco International Arts Festival.

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end the beginning, 2021 Collage on archival board paper (aged plain and numbered paper from 60 to 100 year old books) mirror, glass

44.25 × 84.75 inches (112.4 × 215.3 cm)

LEE QUIÑONES

Born in Ponce, Puerto Rico

Lives and works in Brooklyn, NY

Lee Quiñones is one of the most influential artists to emerge from the New York City subway art movement of the 1970s, painting over a hundred train cars across the MTA system. His transition between the street art scene and mainstream contemporary art spaces bought with it provocative sociopolitical commentary and innovative deployment of the spray paint medium. He has had numerous solo shows and exhibited internationally, beginning with his first gallery presentation at Galleria Medusa in Rome, Italy in 1979 and his first New York show at White Columns in 1980. His works have subsequently been featured in exhibitions at MoMA PS1, Long Island City, NY; Gropius Bau, Berlin, Germany; MFA Boston, MA; Bronx Museum, NY; Museum of Modern Art, NY; Seoul Museum of Art, South Korea; and Museum of Contemporary Art of Rome, Italy, among others.

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Voices Carry, 1940s, 2005 Acrylic, spray paint, paint marker, ink and pencil on navy issue plywood panels from the 1940s and incorporating various graffiti from years past Triptych: 84 × 105.5 inches (213.4 × 266.7 cm) overall

RASHAWN GRIFFIN

Born in Los Angeles, CA

Lives and works in Kansas City, MO

Rashawn Griffin works across mediums and spaces to engage the poetic relationships between objects, architecture, and painting. Griffin received his MFA from Yale University in 2005 and was a resident of the Studio Museum in Harlem’s AIR program from 2005-06. His work was most recently featured in the NSU Art Museum’s group exhibition Lux et Veritas, a survey of a group of artists of color who graduated from Yale between 2000 and 2010 (2023). A solo presentation of his work, entitled a hole-in-the-wallcountry, was presented at the Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art, Overland Park, KN, in 2012. Other exhibitions include shows at the Studio Museum in Harlem, NY; Deutsche Guggenheim, Berlin; Rønnebæksholm, Næstved, Denmark; and the Whitney Biennial 2008.

To bring love/terrible things, 2004 Video (color, audio) 2:48 minutes

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The Internal Fixation, 2023 Mixed media installation Dimensions variable

Born in Houston, TX

Nathaniel Donnett’s interdisciplinary practice shapes and holds open spaces of phenomenological and metaphysical significance. Utilizing sourced and reclaimed objects, Donnett approaches ideas of materiality through Black aesthetic traditions and strategies of lived experiences. Donnett received his BA in Fine Arts from Texas Southern University and his MFA from Yale University School of Art. He is the recipient of the 2022 John Simon Guggenheim Fellowship and a Deans Critical Practice Research Grant and Art and Social Justice Initiative Grant, both from Yale (2020). His work has been exhibited at the Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, AK; the Virginia Museum of Fine Art, Richmond, VA; Project Row Houses, Houston, TX; The Virginia Museum of Contemporary Art, Virginia Beach, VA; The American Museum, Washington D.C.; The University Museum, Houston, TX, The Kemper Contemporary Arts Museum, Kansas City, MO; Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, TX; and the New Museum, New York, NY.

Birth of the Universe 2, 2022-2023

Snare drum, radio/tv antenna, charcoal, light source, wood 14 × 14 × 16 inches (35.6 × 35.6 × 40.6 cm)

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steal away, still a way, steel weight, 2023

Reclaimed backpacks, tambourine jingles, plastic trash bags, duct tape fabric, paper, records, nails 77 × 103 inches (195.6 × 261.6 cm)

ONAJIDE SHABAKA

Born in Cincinnati, OH

Lives and works in Miami, FL

Onajide Shabaka explores our environment and biology, focusing on humans and the ecology that reveal untold or hidden narratives. He studied at California College of the Arts and Art Center College of Design and earned his MFA from Vermont College of Fine Arts. Shabaka has participated in numerous international art residencies, including Diaspora Vibe Cultural Arts Incubator, San Miguel de Allende, Mexico; Anderson Ranch, Aspen, CO; Project Row Houses, Houston, TX; and Everglades (AIRIE), Florida. Exhibitions include shows at Verein Berliner Kunstler, Germany; The Franklin, Chicago, IL; Edna Manley College of the Arts in Kingston, Jamaica; Little Haiti Cultural Center; Under the Bridge Art Space, Frost Art Museum, Miami, FL; and Cindy Rucker Gallery, New York, NY.

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102 × 6 × 6 inches (259.1 × 15.2 × 15.2 cm)
totem
, 2023
Wood, metal, glue, charcoal, wood stain
Burgos 74, 2015 Mixed media on paper 9.5 × 6.875 inches (24.1 × 17.5 cm)

YANIRA COLLADO

Born in Brooklyn, NY

Lives and works in Miami, FL

Yanira Collado is interested in the visual language of information and the processes through which it is recorded, archived, and retrieved. Her work integrates found and reclaimed materials to evoke new perceptions of geographical histories and systems of social economies. Collado has participated in residencies at Artpace, San Antonio, TX (2022); Oolite Arts, South Beach, FL (2019-22); and Joan Mitchell Center, New Orleans, LA (2020, 2022). Her most recent solo exhibition, Areíto/Allusions of Sacred Geometry and Diaspora was presented at the Noyes Cultural Art Center, Evanston, IL, in 2022. She has been the recipient of awards including the South Florida Cultural Consortium Fellowship (2021), Ellie Creator Grant (2019), and a Joan Mitchell Foundation Fellowship (2018). Her work is in the public collections of Pérez Art Museum Miami, FL, and El Museo del Barrio, NY.

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Untitled, 2023 Paint, carbon paper transfers, gel medium transfers, paper, mass produced bandanas, ink, cardboard, oil pastels, textile on custom made wood structure 170.25 × 96 inches (432.4 × 243.8 cm)

LUIS GISPERT

Born in Jersey City, NJ

Lives and works in Brooklyn, NY

Luis Gispert makes paintings, sculptures, and video work that comment on cultural stereotypes and the fetishization of value in contemporary American society. Psycho-geographical narratives under late capitalism are a throughline within his practice, manifesting in composites of familiar imagery and unexpected aesthetics. Gispert studied at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and received his MFA from Yale University (2001). Notable solo exhibitions include shows at the Museum of Contemporary Art, North Miami, FL; Artpace, San Antonio, TX; Hood Museum of Art, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH; and the Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, Berkeley, CA. His work can be found in the public collections of the Whitney Museum of American Art, NY; Museum of Modern Art, NY; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, NY; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA; San Diego Museum of Art, CA; and the Pérez Art Museum Miami, FL.

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Garden of Fugitives, 2023 Emulsified vermiculite, pigment, volcanic sand, gold plated chains 62 × 97.5 inches (157.5 × 247.7 cm) Soft Surrender, 2023 Emulsified vermiculite, pigment, volcanic sand, gold plated chains 30.5 × 24 inches (77.5 × 61 cm)

SOFÍA CÓRDOVA

Born in Carolina, Puerto Rico

Lives and works in Oakland, CA

Sofía Córdova works in mediums including performance, video, sound, music, and installation. Her practice considers the potential of speculative histories and the liberatory dimensions of performance within an interconnected matrix of class, gender, sexuality, colonialism, and systems of late-stage capitalism. Córdova received her BFA in Photography from St. John’s University, Queens, NY, (2005), and her MFA from California College of the Arts, San Francisco, CA (2010). Her work has been exhibited and performed internationally at institutions including the Whitney Museum of American Art, NY; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA, Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive, Berkeley, CA; San Jose Museum of Art, San Jose, CA; Tufts University Galleries, Medford, MA; and MEWO Kunsthalle, Memmingen, Germany. Córdova has been awarded residencies at Eyebeam, NY; Headlands Center for the Arts, Sausalito, CA; Mills College Museum, Oakland, CA; and the ASU Museum, Phoenix, AZ.

A Cast of Thousands (Semilla de acerola), 2022 3D scanned acerola seed, thermoplastic polyester, slate 12.5 × 10 × 8.5 inches

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¿Y X K (TU CREES QUE YO HABLO ESPAÑOL) ? - Vertical (N Y(how) U THINK I SPEAK SPANISH?) - Vertical Edit, i. palma y plátano, ii. sangre y tabaco, iii. caña de azúcar, 2017/2023

3-channel video, color, original sound composition 8:33 minutes

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Pigment print on paper

13.75 × 17.5 inches (34.9 × 44.5 cm)

Pigment print on paper

13.75 × 17.5 inches (34.9 × 44.5 cm)

Above: FRUTA PRIETA (limón 1), 2018/2019 Below: FRUTA PRIETA (carbonerita), 2018/2019 Above: FRUTA PRIETA (pájaro), 2018/2019
Pigment print on paper 13.75 × 17.5 inches (34.9 × 44.5 cm)
Below:
13.75
FRUTA PRIETA (caña de azúcar), 2018/2019 Pigment print on paper
× 17.5 inches (34.9 × 44.5 cm)

ANDRÉ LEON GRAY

Born in Raleigh, NC

André Leon Gray is a multi-disciplinary self-trained artist interested in power structures, social hierarchies, and the synthesis of history and culture, past and present. His work utilizes collage, assemblage, painting, drawing, and photography to code multiple layers of pictorial meaning and material relationships. Gray’s work is in the permanent collections of the North Carolina Museum of Art, Raleigh, NC; the California African American Museum, Los Angeles, CA; and the Gregg Museum of Art & Design, NC State University, Raleigh, NC.

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Undiscovered Genius of the Americas (Inter Caetera), 2023

31.5 × 25.625 inches (80 x 65.1 cm)

Paper collage, cassete tape slip sheets, felt, and gold leaf on paper, with gold leaf on wooden frame
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Untitled (Five Pillars), 2023 Paper collage, graphite on reclaimed target paper, acrylic ink, felt, cardboard, cowrie shell, and foil ribbon on record jackets on cardboard, mounted on birch plywood with gold leaf on severed wooden frame 17.125 × 66.625 inches (43.5 × 169.2 cm)

SIKKEMA JENKINS & CO. 530 WEST 22ND STREET NEW YORK, NY 10011 TEL 212 929 2262 WWW.SIKKEMAJENKINSCO.COM
Acoustic Control Corporation
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