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Nikko Washington: For The Old Gods and The New: KAVI GUPTA | WASHINGTON BLVD. FL. 2

Past exhibition
28 October 2023 - 9 March 2024
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Overview
Nikko Washington: For The Old Gods and The New, KAVI GUPTA | WASHINGTON BLVD. FL. 2

“Sports heroes are larger than life. The players become idols; they represent qualities, like characters in a myth.”

– Nikko Washington

 

Kavi Gupta presents a solo exhibition of new paintings by Chicago-based artist Nikko Washington, whose work was recently featured in the gallery’s critically acclaimed, philanthropic exhibition Skin + Masks, curated by award-winning rapper and social activist Vic Mensa.


Washington’s emotive portraits of Black athletes make space for new perspectives on the roles of myth, folklore, and heroism in contemporary American culture.


Washington’s position is informed by the ways stories that enslaved Africans brought to this country have formed the basis of American value systems. One example among many is the Uncle Remus stories. Published by Joel Chandler Harris, a white, Southern journalist and fiction author, these morality tales were all based on stories Harris heard from enslaved Black people he had met while visiting Southern plantations.


The fictionalized Uncle Remus, portrayed by Harris as a kindly, wise, elder freedman, narrates the stories, which often feature characters who outwit and overcome stronger and more powerful enemies through brains and skill. The stories transmit ethical life lessons that were subsequently adopted by American culture at large. As such, the characters and tales from Uncle Remus, as well as numerous other African folkloric collections, have been repeatedly rewritten into children's books, cartoons, novels, and movies, partly shaping what is commonly considered the American storytelling tradition.


“These stories were passed down by people who were beginning again in a hostile environment,” Washington says. “They’re Genesis stories, about the beginning of a world.”

 

Washington invites us to contemplate this phenomenon through the allure of sports heroes. His paintings center athletes like Jesse Owens, who defeated Nazi athletes at the Berlin Olympics of 1936 and won gold, only to be dejected and diminished upon his return to America by a culture dominated by racism and white supremacy; Sammy Sosa, the Dominican baseball star who ultimately fell from grace due to scandals involving doping, cheating, and skin bleaching; and boxer Jack Johnson, who defeated James J. Jeffries, a.k.a. the Great White Hope, to become the first Black heavyweight boxing champion of the world during the height of the Jim Crow era.

 

Like Br’er Rabbit and the other protagonists of the Uncle Remus stories, these are people who overcame stronger and more powerful forces, often only to be foiled or frustrated by the pitfalls of their own oversimplified persona.


“We look for empowerment in commemorations of the heroes of these stories,” Washington says. “It represents collective memory, but also collective amnesia.”


The heroes of folklore are rarely portrayed as complete human beings. They are reduced to symbols; embodiments of idealized attributes such as bravery, strength, quickness, or wit; carriers for whatever value systems the storyteller wishes to encourage.

 

 

When a living person is lionized as a hero, it is not because they have proven themselves to be complicated, flawed, or mutable. On the contrary, it is because for a brief time, perhaps only an instant, they accomplished something extraordinary. They are simultaneously aggrandized by the public imagination, and simplified into an icon of whatever trait they exemplified during their supposedly greatest moment.


Athletes are among the most common American cultural heroes, perhaps because they seem to embody so many so-called American values: God-given talent; hard work; perseverance; dominance. They symbolize everything ordinary Americans are supposed to want to be.


The problem of the star athlete is one of autonomy—of maintaining the right to be their authentic self, and to decide what that means and how it will evolve over time. Once reduced to a symbol, a hero loses the freedom to show their humanity. There is no them separate from their part in a story. They are, in a sense, owned by their audience.


Not just an artist but an avid boxer, Washington has thought a lot about this predicament.


“Sports heroes are larger than life,” he says. “The players become idols; they represent qualities, like characters in a myth.”


Like star athletes and mythological heroes alike, it has often seemed to Washington that Black Americans don’t have a cultural identity free from the gaze of the majoritarian audience. Though awareness of its true origins may have been lost, Washington relocates deeper and more subjective visions of the legacy of Black America amid the hazy backgrounds, abstract colorfields, and frozen actions in his paintings.


“Painting is about emotional communication,” Washington says. “The looseness of how I paint is like a memory.”

 
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Works
  • Nikko Washington How the Cheetah Got His Spots, 2023 Oil on canvas 40 x 60 in. 101.6 x 152.4 cm
    Nikko Washington
    How the Cheetah Got His Spots, 2023
    Oil on canvas
    40 x 60 in.
    101.6 x 152.4 cm
  • Nikko Washington World's Largest Machine , 2022 Oil on canvas 48 x 48 in 121.9 x 121.9 cm
    Nikko Washington
    World's Largest Machine , 2022
    Oil on canvas
    48 x 48 in
    121.9 x 121.9 cm
  • Nikko Washington ANANSI, 2023 Liquid graphite and digital collage on paper 12 x 9 in. 30.5 x 22.9 cm
    Nikko Washington
    ANANSI, 2023
    Liquid graphite and digital collage on paper
    12 x 9 in.
    30.5 x 22.9 cm
  • Nikko Washington Idol I, 2023 Liquid graphite and digital collage on paper 9 x 8 1/2 in. 22.9 x 21.6 cm
    Nikko Washington
    Idol I, 2023
    Liquid graphite and digital collage on paper
    9 x 8 1/2 in.
    22.9 x 21.6 cm
  • Nikko Washington Idol II, 2023 Liquid graphite and digital collage on paper 9 x 8 1/2 in. 22.9 x 21.6 cm
    Nikko Washington
    Idol II, 2023
    Liquid graphite and digital collage on paper
    9 x 8 1/2 in.
    22.9 x 21.6 cm
  • Nikko Washington Idol III, 2023 Liquid graphite and digital collage on paper 9 x 8 1/2 in. 22.9 x 21.6 cm
    Nikko Washington
    Idol III, 2023
    Liquid graphite and digital collage on paper
    9 x 8 1/2 in.
    22.9 x 21.6 cm
  • Nikko Washington Jesse, 2023 Liquid graphite and digital collage on paper 9 x 8 1/2 in. 22.9 x 21.6 cm
    Nikko Washington
    Jesse, 2023
    Liquid graphite and digital collage on paper
    9 x 8 1/2 in.
    22.9 x 21.6 cm
Installation Views
  • 2023 11 Nikko Washington 1
  • 2023 11 Nikko Washington 2
  • 2023 11 Nikko Washington 4
  • 2023 11 Nikko Washington 3
  • 2023 11 Nikko Washington 5
  • 2023 11 Nikko Washington 7
  • 2023 11 Nikko Washington 8
  • 2023 11 Nikko Washington 6
  • 2023 11 Nikko Washington 10
  • 2023 11 Nikko Washington 12
  • 2023 11 Nikko Washington 13
  • 2023 11 Nikko Washington 11
Press
  • Image courtesy of Maxwell Evans and Block Club Chicago

    Nikko Washington: South Side Artist’s Newest Paintings Sing The Praises Of Modern Deities and Black Athletes

    Maxwell Evans, Block Club Chicago, January 10, 2024
  • Nikko Washington, How the Cheetah Got His Spots

    Nikko Washington: A Review of Rising Heroes at Kavi Gupta

    Vasia Rigou, Newcity Art, November 8, 2023
Events
  • Opening Reception: Nikko Washington, For the Old Gods and the New

    Opening Reception: Nikko Washington, For the Old Gods and the New

    KAVI GUPTA | WASHINGTON BLVD. FL. 2 28 Oct 2023
    Join us at Kavi Gupta | Washington Blvd. on Saturday, October 28 from 4–7 PM for the opening reception of For the Old Gods and the New , a solo exhibition of new paintings by Chicago-based artist Nikko Washington, whose work was recently featured in the gallery’s critically acclaimed, philanthropic exhibition Skin + Masks , curated by award-winning rapper and social activist Vic Mensa . Washington’s emotive portraits of Black athletes make space for new perspectives on the roles of myth, folk- lore, and heroism in contemporary American culture. For...
    Read more

Related artist

  • Nikko Washington

    Nikko Washington

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