Art

Ronald Jackson’s Masked Portraits of Imaginary Characters Stoke Curiosity About Their Stories

April 25, 2024

Kate Mothes

an oil painting of an imagined young black figure wearing a plaid lampshade bucket hat, a blue and green eye mask, and a blue button down shirt

“Undercover” (2024), oil on canvas, 60 x 60 inches. All images © Ronald Jackson, shared with permission

Six years ago, Ronald Jackson had only four months to prepare for a solo exhibition. The short time frame led to a series of large-scale portraits that focused on an imagined central figure, often peering directly back at the viewer, in front of vibrant backgrounds. But he quickly grew uninspired by painting the straightforward head-and-shoulder compositions. “Portraits, which are usually based in concepts of identity, can present a challenge for artists desiring to suggest narratives,” he tells Colossal.

In his bold oil paintings, Jackson illuminates imagination itself. He began to incorporate masks as a way to enrich his own exploration of portraiture while simultaneously kindling a sense of curiosity about the individuals and their histories. Rather than portraying someone specific, each piece asks, “Who do you think this is?”

“The primary inspiration for my art comes from the value that I have in the untold stories of African Americans of the past,” he says, “specifically the more intimate stories keying in on their basic humanity, as opposed to the repeated narratives of societal challenges and struggles.” The mask motif, he realized, was a perfect way to stoke inquisitiveness, not just about identity but of its connection to broader stories, connecting past and present.

For the last two years, Jackson has focused on an imagined figure named Johnnie Mae King. To help tell her story, he has become more interested in community collaboration, enlisting others to help develop the character’s narrative through flash fiction and other types of creative writing. Through this cooperative process, Jackson has developed an online platform, currently being refined before a public launch, where literary artists can engage with visual art through the written word.

In addition to the storytelling platform, Jackson is currently working toward a solo exhibition in 2025. Explore more on his website, and follow updates on Instagram.

 

an oil painting of an imagined young black woman wearing a blue blouse and green skirt, standing in front of a black and white background holding a pink jello mold on a platter in front of her and wearing a blue and green eye mask

“Potluck Johnnie” (2024), oil on canvas, 40 x 46 inches

an oil painting of an imagined young black figure wearing a button down shirt and suspenders, in front of a foliage-patterned background nd holding a pistol, with his face covered in a geometrically patterned mask that reveals his eyes, nose, and mouth

“Saint Peter, 1960 A.D.” (2022), oil on canvas, 60 x 72 inches

an oil painting of an imagined young black woman wearing a black and white dress, gloves, and an eye mask, standing in a room with patterned wallpaper, a pink gramophone, and a chair

“Badass” (2024), oil on canvas, 66 x 72 inches

an oil painting of an imagined young black woman wearing a a floral top and a patterned face mask that reveals her eyes, nose and mouth

“A Dwelling Down Roads Unpaved” (2020, oil on canvas, 72 x 84 inches

an oil painting of an imagined young black woman wearing a scarf on her head, a red top, a blue and white face covering that shows her eyes, nose, and mouth, and white cat-eye glasses

“She Lived in the Spirit of Her Mother’s Dreams” (2020), oil on canvas, 60 x 72 inches

an oil painting of an imagined young black woman wearing a black and white dress and an eye mask, standing in a room with patterned wallpaper, a grammophone

“Arrival” (2024), oil on canvas, 66 x 72 inches

an oil painting of an imagined young black woman wearing a white and blue dress, in front of a green leafy background, wearing a patterned mask and flowers in her hair

“In a Day, She Became the Master of Her House” (2019), oil on canvas, 55 x 65 inches

 

 

advertisement



Design

Just Add Water: Grow Your Own Furniture with These Pop-Up Sponge Designs

April 24, 2024

Grace Ebert

a collection of sponge furniture and functional goods on a blue backdrop

Photo by Jasmine Deporta. All images courtesy of ÉCAL, shared with permission

A team of industrial designers prototyped a furniture collection that dramatically transforms from flat sheets into fully functional objects, no tools required.

Taking Gaetano Pesce’s spectacular “Up 5” chair as a starting point, Under Pressure Solutions (UPS) is an experimental research project helmed by industrial designers and ÉCAL teachers Camille Blin, Christophe Guberan, Anthony Guex, Chris Kabel, and Julie Richoz. The team recognized the rampant demand for online commerce and subsequent shipping processes that, for furniture, was often cumbersome, expensive, and wasteful given the size and bulk of the products.

As an alternative, they produced a line of stools, chairs, wine racks, and more from cellulose sponge that can be squashed and dried flat, sometimes small enough to fit into a regular envelope. The biodegradable material activates with water and expands ten times its size. Once dry, it hardens into its final form and is more durable than other plastic-based foams. As the furniture bows or dips with use, a spray of water allows the material to spring back to a more robust position.

UPS departs from the particle board and plastics often seen at big box stores. During a two-year research process, the designers tested 56 materials before settling on cellulose sponge made with vegetal fibers, sodium sulphate crystals, softeners, and wood pulp. After various manufacturing and sustainability tests, the team produced 16 unique objects from pendant lights and shelves to chairs and coffee table bases.

The project was recently on view for Milan Design Week, and you can learn more about making process on the UPS site.

 

a mug and book rest on a yellow stool made of sponge bricks

Photo by Younes Klouche

a yellow sponge stool

Photo by Younes Klouche

a sponge chair on a blue backdrop

Photo by Jasmine Deporta

a person stands atop a sponge stool with holes

Photo by Jasmine Deporta

an acrylic top with a glass of water and other objects sits atop a sponge base while a person sleeps on a couch nearby

Photo by Jasmine Deporta

wine bottles rest on a sponge wine rack

Photo by Jasmine Deporta

the sponge bowl and wine rack on a blue backdrop

Photo by Jasmine Deporta

 

 



Art

Tune into Your Own Brain Waves with Steve Parker’s Suspended Constellations of Salvaged Brass

April 24, 2024

Grace Ebert

a woman stands in a concrete tunnel outside amid suspended brass instruments

“Sonic Meditation for Solo Performer No. 2,” salvaged brass, electronics, astroturf, EEG brain monitor, video projection. All images © Steve Parker, shared with permission

Many therapists advise patients to reconnect with their inner voice, a part of treatment that, as anyone who’s tried it can attest, is easier said than done. But what if you could tune into to your internal ups and downs in the same way you listen to a song?

In his Sonic Meditation for Solo Performer series, Austin-based artist and musician Steve Parker fashions immersive installations of salvaged brass. Suspended in clusters with their bells pointing every direction, the instruments envelop a single viewer, who wears an EEG brain monitor and silently reads a series of meditations. A custom software program translates the ensuing brain waves into a 16-part composition played through the winds. The result is a multi-sensory experience that wraps the viewer in the soft vibration of sound waves and makes their inner monologue audible.

Parker frequently incorporates unique ways to interact with instruments into his practice, including in the sprawling 2020 work titled “Ghost Box,” which produced sound in response to human touch. He recently installed the towering purple “Fanfare” sculpture in a Meridian, Idaho, public park, which similarly invites the public to listen to the sounds of the surrounding environment through small trumpet bells at the base.

For more of Parker’s musical works, visit his site and Instagram.

 

a cluster of brass instruments atop a large purple pole

Detail of “Fanfare,” steel, copper, and brass, 6 x 6 x 18 feet

a woman stands in a concrete tunnel outside amid suspended brass instruments

“Sonic Meditation for Solo Performer No. 2,” salvaged brass, electronics, astroturf, EEG brain monitor, video projection

a cluster of suspended brass instruments hang in a gallery

“Sonic Meditation for Solo Performer No. 1 (for Pauline Oliveros and Alvin Lucier),” salvaged brass, electronics, astroturf, EEG brain monitor, video projection

a man stands with a monitor on his head amid a cluster of suspended brass instruments

“Sonic Meditation for Solo Performer No. 1 (for Pauline Oliveros and Alvin Lucier),” salvaged brass, electronics, astroturf, EEG brain monitor, video projection

a cluster of brass instruments atop a purple pole near a playground

“Fanfare,” steel, copper, and brass, 6 x 6 x 18 feet

 

 



Art

Imagining Worlds After Climate Disaster, Julie Heffernan Melds Chaos and the Sublime

April 23, 2024

Grace Ebert

logs form a rig on water with a person sawing off a tip. a fire burns in the background

“Self Portrait as Emergency Shipwright” (2013), oil on canvas, 60 x 84 inches. All images © Julie Heffernan, shared with permission

Julie Heffernan likens her paintings to “advent calendars gone haywire.” Working in oil on canvas, the Brooklyn-based artist renders vast dreamworlds with tiny vignettes scattered across wider landscapes. Appearing from a distant or aerial perspective, the pieces envision the possibilities of life after fires, floods, and other climate disasters and potential opportunities for emerging anew.

Grand in scale and scope, the intricate paintings bear titles like “Self Portrait as Emergency Shipwright” and “Self Portrait with Sanctuary,” which nod to the personal details within each work. Various characters recur in the pieces, but where they once appeared alongside fresh fruit as an enduring metaphor for youthfulness, today, they’re surrounded by imagery of decay.”I find myself repeatedly drawn to landscape painting in order to explore my own issues, both planetary and personal,” she says. “I imagine landscapes that bear witness to our rise and fall as a great power but also to the workings of one woman’s mind.”

 

water rises around a tree with makeshift storage and a bed in its branches

“Self-Portrait as Tree in Water” (2014), oil on canvas, 40 x 46 inches

Painting, the artist explains, is a way “to see better” and to place the struggles and difficulties of the world within a context. Despite fires raging in the background, or in the case of “Weather Change,” a massive iceberg rapidly melting in the seas, Heffernan’s works are not fatalistic, instead highlighting the immense beauty of human ingenuity. She adds in a statement:

I wanted imagery that might suggest other ways we could cope and possibly even flourish in a new extreme climate and to give my characters things they must tend. I give them water and tools to stop the burning; the tarred and feathered heads of big polluters; a library of great books to surround themselves with as they contend with the madness of man-made calamities.

Evoking the tradition of Hudson River School artists like Thomas Cole, Heffernan’s paintings focus on landscapes that appear amidst chaos as a sort of paradise. She’s also known to paint over and retouch works even after she’s deemed them complete, each time revising her idyllic vision and inching closer to the sublime.

It’s worth checking out an archive of the artist’s paintings to see how the scenes and characters have evolved. Follow her work on Instagram, along with updates about her graphic novel, Babe in the Woods: Or, the Art of Getting Lost, slated for release in September. And if you’re in San Francisco, mark your calendars for November, when Heffernan will have work on view at Catharine Clark Gallery.

 

a pink sky floats above people walking across a towering rickety bridge over a river

“Pink Landscape” (2012), oil on canvas, 70 x 56 inches

melting ice unearths a grassy island while people in a ship below battle rising seas

“Weather Change” (2019), oil on canvas, 74 x 96 inches

a woman carries a basket of objects below a makeshift canopy of draped fabric while boulders fall

“Self Portrait with Sanctuary” (2017), oil on canvas, 102 x 76 inches

flowers sprawl across a tree with a person standing in the foreground above dead animals

“Self-Portrait as Animal Bed” (2024), oil on canvas, 56 x 48 inches

a naked woman peers down at a large mound that contains

“Study for SP with Mound” (2023), oil on canvas, 20 x 20 inches

 

 



Art History

In Ernesto Neto’s Largest Installation to Date, the World Is a Crocheted Ship Moving to a Single Rhythm

April 23, 2024

Kate Mothes

an installation view of an expansive crocheted installation suspended in a large gallery space with rope-like pieces and weights draping it down to the floor

Photo by Joana Linda. All images © Ernesto Neto, courtesy of MAAT, shared with permission

An enormous, cascading installation of crocheted fabric strips stretches across a cavernous gallery in Ernesto Neto’s newest exhibition. At MAAT in Lisbon, the Brazilian artist (previously) presents Nosso Barco Tambor Terra, which translates to “our boat drum Earth,” a solo exhibition encompassing one of the largest suspended sculptures he has ever made.

Created with a team of assistants in his expansive Rio de Janeiro studio, the new piece draws on images of sails and maritime materials like canvas and rope. Neto nods to the history of transatlantic voyages between Europe and South America, stitching remnants of bright chintz, common in Brazil, into a swathe of fabric punctuated by points of interest like a vessel full of decorated drums or corn kernels,  a symbol of international trade. Historically, the percussive instrument kept a rhythm for the galley rowers, some of whom would have been enslaved people.

 

a detail of colorful strips of chintz fabric crocheted into a suspended sculpture

Photo by Joana Linda

Suspended from the ceiling, the central work in Nosso Barco Tambor Terra adopts a cell-like structure, with numerous colors and patterns that intertwine, drape, stretch, and overlap. The piece suggests “a ship, a primordial beast, a forest, or even, and more likely, all of those things and infinite others,” writes curator Jacopo Crivelli Visconti in the exhibition text. He emphasizes that Neto portrays the world as a whole, defining the earth as “ancestral, pre-colonial, and even pre-human.”

The artist considers the dark legacies of enforced displacement and slavery during colonial rule, which the Portuguese implemented in Brazil. He situates the work as celebration of the planet’s array of people, cultures, and “worldviews whose strength and beauty one must recognise, reaffirm,” Visconti says. Amid destruction and chaos, Neto’s ark-like vessel envisions a way to propel the whole world forward.

The exhibition opens May 2 and continues through October 7 in Lisbon. Find more from MAAT.

 

an overview of an expansive crocheted installation suspended in a large gallery space with rope-like pieces and weights draping it down to the floor

Photo by Joana Linda

layers of crocheted chintz fabric in a large museum installation

Photo by Joana Linda

two side-by-side images showing crocheted details of chintz fabric suspended in a large sculpture, with the image on the left showing a pocket full of corn kernels

Photos by Joana Linda

a view looking up at a large crocheted installation

Photo by Joana Linda

a group of assistants work on crocheting a large suspended sculpture made from strips of chintz fabric

Photo by Paulo Schettino

two side-by-side images showing different installation stages of a large sculptural installation in a museum

Photos by Joana Linda

a large crocheted installation spread out on the floor of the artist's studio

Photo by Paulo Schettino

 

 



Art

Max Naylor Rambles Through Mystical Woodlands in Ethereal Oil and Ink Paintings

April 23, 2024

Kate Mothes

an oil and ink painting of trees and a rocky coastline with waves rushing in against the shore

“Storm Surge” (2023), ink on paper, 51 x 66 centimeters. All images © Max Naylor, shared with permission

Through ancient wooded glens and along rugged sea coasts, Max Naylor invites us to wander along shady passageways, squeeze between lichen-cloaked boulders, and inhale the fragrance of wildflowers. His detailed landscapes in ink and oil paint (previously) capture petals, branches, waves, and an array of botanicals in dreamlike scenes that teeter elegantly on the edge of reality.

Time of day is often indeterminate in Naylor’s paintings, where blue may suggest nighttime or just the shade cast below the cover of trees. Sometimes the scenes entice us into misty distances or a hilly horizon beyond. The artist employs atmospheric light and repeating tree trunks or flowers that verge on pure pattern, playing with our perception of presence and depth by drawing attention to all details at once.

If you’re in Bristol, stop by Spike Island Open Studios between May 3 and 5 to see Naylor’s work in person alongside more than 70 other artists. See more on the artist’s website and Instagram.

 

an oil and ink painting of a forest with a glen of wildflowers and fungus on trees in the foreground

“Woodland Glade” (2024), ink on paper, 51 x 66 centimeters

an oil and ink painting of a large erratic boulder covered with lichen and moss, with flowers flowing underneath it

“Erratic Boulder (after the deluge)” (2024), oil and ink on linen, 160 x 180 centimeters

an oil and ink painting of a yellow wooded scene with lots of boulders covered in lichen spots

“Early Glow” (2024), ink on paper, 51 x 66 centimeters

an oil and ink painting in a blue palette featuring trees and patterns of snowdrops on the forest floor

“Blue Landscape with Snowdrops” (2024), ink on paper, 51 x 66 centimeters

an oil painting of a large erratic boulder in a meadow with lichen and moss all over it

“Nestling” (2024), oil on linen, 75 x 95 centimeters

an oil and ink painting of ab abstract landscape with lots of foliage

“Wild Wild Life” (2024), ink on paper, 51 x 66 centimeters

an oil and ink painting of a rocky landscape with lots of lichen and moss on the boulders and a small waterfall tucked in the brush

“Under the Gunnera” (2023), ink on paper, 51 x 66 centimeters

an oil and ink painting of a coastline with trees and a cloudy sky

“Ragged Coast with Sea Cabbage” (2023), ink on paper, 51 x 66 centimeters