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Ken Gonzales-Day


Ken Gonzales-Day
Three Graces, Los Angeles, CA, 2015.
Lightjet print, 22 x 38 in.
Courtesy the artist and Luis De Jesus Los Angeles.

 


Ken Gonzales-Day

Past Present, 2015.
Lightjet print, 22 x 30 in.
Courtesy the artist and Luis De Jesus Los Angeles.

 


Ken Gonzales-Day

Untitled (Henry Weekes, Bust of an African Woman [based on a photographic image of Mary Seacole]; and Jean-Baptiste Pigalle, Bust of Mme. Adélaïde Julie Mirleau de Neuville, née Garnier d’Isle, The J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, CA), 2011.
Courtesy the artist and Luis De Jesus Los Angeles.

 

Ken Gonzales-Day is a Los Angeles-based artist whose interdisciplinary practice considers the historical construction of race and the limits of representational systems ranging from the lynching photograph to the museum display. "The Searching for California Hang Trees" series offered a critical look at the lack of documentation of lynching sites, while the “Erased Lynching” series sought to address the larger erasure of Asians, blacks, Latinos, and Native Americans from the history of lynching. The "Profiled" series looked even further back into history to consider how the sculptural depiction of race, and its display, contributed to racial formation today.

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Issue 31

Spheres of Estrangement: Art, Politics, Curating

Matthew Hanson

A conversation between Franco ‘Bifo’ Beradi and Penny Rafferty

by Josephine Baker-Heaslip

Alistair Hudson, Jeni Fulton, Paul Stewart and Sam Thorne.

Lilian Cameron, Suzana Milevska, Jared Pappas-Kelley, Adrian Shaw, Paul Stewart

Alison Hugill in conversation with Carson Chan

Jack Schneider