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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jeffrey Gibson, Time Carriers, 2019
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jeffrey Gibson, Time Carriers, 2019
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jeffrey Gibson, Time Carriers, 2019
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jeffrey Gibson, Time Carriers, 2019
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jeffrey Gibson, Time Carriers, 2019 To Name An Other, Esker Foundation
Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Jeffrey Gibson, Time Carriers, 2019 To Name An Other, Esker Foundation

Jeffrey Gibson at Esker Foundation from Esker Foundation on Vimeo.

Jeffrey Gibson USA, b. 1972

Time Carriers, 2019
Installation with 51 screen printed elk hide drums and 51 garments
Installation dimensions variable
7413

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  • Time Carriers
Time Carriers conjures a vision of many hands providing a framework of support, a fluid utopia where trust and movement go hand in hand. It evokes a time frame that...
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Time Carriers conjures a vision of many hands providing a framework of support, a fluid utopia where trust and movement go hand in hand. It evokes a time frame that both unites and collapses present, past, and future into an undulating and responsive single unit, something that could best be described as community or family. This idea is especially appropriate when considering Jeffrey Gibson’s work, as he has always pushed to create kinship among unlikely partners. Collaboration is at the heart of his practice; working and learning with artists and craftspeople as a way to resist acculturation, support a strong legacy of making, and to build and honor community.

Gibson’s focus on creating garments in the last few years is a logical progression from previous work, drawing on the bodily-ness of his ongoing punching bags series and the cloak-like qualities of his wall hangings. Each garment starts from a single pattern, cut to be oversized on the artist’s body. In researching traditional Indigenous makers who were creating things for themselves and their communities for use, not as art, Gibson observed the incredible power and respect these garments commanded. He decided he wanted to “dress” his work with his own cultural legacy, and further complicate his definition of the art object by insisting his work be wearable. After seeing too many lifeless garments in museum display cases, decontextualized from their cultures and the individuals who wore them, it became crucial to Gibson to also activate his garment works through performance.

Originally commissioned as a performance by the National Portrait Gallery, Washington, in 2019, and then presented in New York at the New Museum, To Name An Other was first seen as both a performance and an installation in his presentation at the Esker Foundation in Canada. The garments and accompanying drums are printed with a “name” that describes an action or event that Gibson has found inspiring and courageous in defiance of circumstances he views as wrong. Avoiding terms such as “cultural resistance,” “colonialism,” or “patriarchy” for fear they will become flattened, Gibson prefers to describe the specifics of a circumstance, defining them as either right or wrong. Things are wrong when someone is silenced, erased, denied their civil rights, treated inhumanely, or because privilege and power are given rules that are different or inequitable. He states, “Although I feel confident that I know what is right and wrong, I also know that life is a constant negotiation and that negotiating is more and more difficult the more engaged you become.” Although the performance of To Name An Other occurs for just under an hour, its residual echo continues to make space for a diversity of voices to have powerful and continued agency in the public sphere; the garments activated in the performance remain, and have been forever altered by the abilities, responses, and histories of living bodies and loud voices.
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Provenance

Artist's Studio, Hudson, NY, 2018
Kavi Gupta, Chicago, IL 2020

Exhibitions

Time Carriers, To Name Another, The Esker Foundation, Calgary Alberta, Canada, 2019
To Name Another, National Portrait Gallery, Washington, DC, Dorothy Moss, curator of painting and sculpture,
2019
To Name Another, The Anthropophagic Effect, The New Museum, New York, NY, 2019
Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer, Madison Museum of Art, Madison, WI, 2020 (traveled; catalogue)
Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer, Seattle Art Museum, Seattle, WA, 2019 (traveled; catalogue)
Jeffrey Gibson: This is the Day, Blanton Museum of Art, Austin, TX 2018 (traveled; catalogue)
Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer, Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, MS, 2019 (traveled; catalogue)
Jeffrey Gibson: Like a Hammer, Denver Art Museum, Denver, CO, 2019 (traveled; catalogue)
Jeffrey Gibson: This is the Day, Blanton Museum of Art, Austin, TX, 2019
Jeffrey Gibson: This is the Day, Wellin Museum of Art, Clinton, NY, 2018 (traveled; catalogue)

Publications

Jeffrey Gibson; TIme Carriers, The Esker Foundation, Exhibition Brochure, Naomi Potter Director/Curator, with New Museum Curators: Johanna Burton, Keith Haring, Director and Curator of Public Engagement, Sara O’Keeffe, Associate Curator, Kate Wiener, Curatorial Assistant.
2019
Jeffrey Gibson; Like a Hamer, Denver Museum of Art, Curated by John P. Lukavic (Author), With essays by Glenn Adamson ( Anne Ellegood Jen Mergel and Sara Raza.
Jeffrey Gibson: This is the Day, Wellin Museum of Art, Curated By Tracy Adler. Essays by Tracy L. Adler, Lowery Stokes Sims, independent scholar and curator of modern and contemporary art, and Jane Panetta, associate curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art, 2018
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