ART CITIES:New York-Jason Rhoades

Jason Rhoades, Tijuanatanjierchandelier (2006), Installation view: Venice Biennale (2007), © The Estate of Jason Rhoades, Courtesy The Estate of Jason Rhoades, David Zwirner and Hauser & Wirth. Photo: A. BurgerJason Rhoades is known for monumental, room-filling installations. These idiosyncratic sculptures incorporate a wide range of objects including products of mass culture combined with hand-made items and biographical references. Drawing on the history of assemblage, Rhoades imbues his materials with powerful formal, narrative and allegorical links, encouraging viewers to connect and interpret the associative chains.

By Efi Michalarou
Photo: David Zwirner Gallery Archive

When Jason Rhoades (1965-2006) died unexpectedly at the age of 41, he left behind a body of work comprised of massive installations that are as physically complex as they are intellectually challenging. Jason Rhoades’s large-scale installation “Tijuanatanjierchandelier” was first installed at the Centro de Arte Contemporáneo in Málaga, Spain, in 2006, and then featured the following year at the 52nd Venice Biennale. Today the exhibition at David Zwirner Gallery marks the first presentation of “Tijuanatanjierchandelier” in New York. This significant work (one of several installations made during the latter part of the artist’s career) exemplifies Rhoades’s singular investigation of contemporary consumer culture, his career-long interest in probing both language and identity, and his ceaseless drive to push the limits of convention. Made in the last year of the artist’s life, “Tijuanatanjierchandelier” reflects Rhoades’s many-layered engagement with language, identity, consumption, industry, and exhibition-making in a transcultural, globalized world. Rhoades emerged in the 1990s as one of the most formally and conceptually rigorous artists of his time. During his short but prolific career he became known for highly original, large-scale sculptural installations, which incorporate various materials inspired by Los Angeles car culture and his upbringing in rural Northern California, as well as by a mixture of historical and contemporary global and regional influences that he explored throughout his life. Until his untimely death, in 2006 Rhoades carried out a continual assault on aesthetic conventions and the rules governing the art world, wryly subverting those conditions by integrating them into his practice. He conceived his works as part of an ongoing project, to which objects were continuously added, assembled, and reassembled in various configurations. The title of the work refers to the cities of Tijuana, Mexico, and Tangier, Morocco, two socially and culturally distinct locales separated by 6,000 miles, which Rhoades associates through their respective locations at the borders between the so-called developing world and the Euro-American West. The installation is composed of a chaotic web of dangling chandelier-like sculptures made up of neon lights dispersed above an array of items and souvenirs, including mattresses, rugs, animal pelts, imposter handbags, sombreros, Moroccan lanterns, taxidermied animal heads, leather belts, ceramic gourds, and wooden maracas, among other found objects. Reminiscent of a bazaar or marketplace, the work addresses the rise of global tourism and consumerism, industries that have come to define the economies of these areas, while also visualizing the tension that emerges between cultural expression and identity, and cultural appropriation and stereotype. In his choice of these two locations, Rhoades also acknowledges the broader targeting of Latin Americans and Muslims in the post-9/11 political climate. Though created before the 2008 global recession, the global refugee crises, and the ensuing wave of xenophobic nationalism, “Tijuanatanjierchandelier” anticipated the tensions that have recently erupted between the drive for increased free trade and globalization and the persistence of traditional notions of national sovereignty and security. The use of language was central to Rhoades’s practice, and prominent within the installation are Spanish and English euphemisms and slang words for “vagina” rendered as glowing neon signs that are at once elevatory, transgressive, misogynist, and comically absurd. His use of these terms relates to a cross-cultural compendium of synonyms for female genitalia that he primarily compiled over the last few years of his life. In “Tijuanatanjierchandelier” Rhoades’s use of these taboo terms visualizes the “pornographic” excess of information in a globalized, media-saturated digital age, which he further links to the intermixing of local identity and global consumerism through the collection of objects and materials that populate the immersive installation.

Info: David Zwirner Gallery, 519 West 19th Street, New York, Duration: 24/10-7/12/19, Days & H/ours: Tue-Sat 10:00-18:00, www.davidzwirner.com

Jason Rhoades, Tijuanatanjierchandelier (2006), Installation view: Venice Biennale (2007), © The Estate of Jason Rhoades, Courtesy The Estate of Jason Rhoades, David Zwirner, and Hauser & Wirth, Photo: A. Burger
Jason Rhoades, Tijuanatanjierchandelier (2006), Installation view: Venice Biennale (2007), © The Estate of Jason Rhoades, Courtesy The Estate of Jason Rhoades, David Zwirner, and Hauser & Wirth

 

 

Jason Rhoades, Tijuanatanjierchandelier (2006), Installation view: CAC Málaga (2006), © The Estate of Jason Rhoades, Courtesy The Estate of Jason Rhoades, David Zwirner, and Hauser & Wirth
Jason Rhoades, Tijuanatanjierchandelier (2006), Installation view: CAC Málaga (2006), © The Estate of Jason Rhoades, Courtesy The Estate of Jason Rhoades, David Zwirner, and Hauser & Wirth

 

 

Jason Rhoades, Tijuanatanjierchandelier (2006), Installation view: CAC Málaga (2006), © The Estate of Jason Rhoades, Courtesy The Estate of Jason Rhoades, David Zwirner, and Hauser & Wirth
Jason Rhoades, Tijuanatanjierchandelier (2006), Installation view: CAC Málaga (2006), © The Estate of Jason Rhoades, Courtesy The Estate of Jason Rhoades, David Zwirner, and Hauser & Wirth

 

 

Jason Rhoades, Chandelier 32, 2006, Neon Glass: Muffin, Low Country, Machine; 2 transformers, orange cord with three-plug, rope, armature wire, camel, glass lead star, hanging basket with bronze mirror, ceramic dolphin, glass lead horse, glass drier, mexican balls, 7 dream catchers, miniature sombrero, candle light, leather fur bag, 235 x 115 x 105 cm, © The Estate of Jason Rhoades, Courtesy The Estate of Jason Rhoades, David Zwirner, and Hauser & Wirth
Jason Rhoades, Chandelier 32, 2006, Neon Glass: Muffin, Low Country, Machine; 2 transformers, orange cord with three-plug, rope, armature wire, camel, glass lead star, hanging basket with bronze mirror, ceramic dolphin, glass lead horse, glass drier, mexican balls, 7 dream catchers, miniature sombrero, candle light, leather fur bag, 235 x 115 x 105 cm, © The Estate of Jason Rhoades, Courtesy The Estate of Jason Rhoades, David Zwirner, and Hauser & Wirth