A co-presentation with New York’s Whitney Museum of American Art,
LACMA takes a first-ever mid-career look at the Ethiopian-American
artist’s striking large-scale abstractions, with 35 paintings and 40
works on paper. Active since the mid-’90s, Mehretu uses ink and
paint to create captivating and chaotic scenes that capture
the—often unforgiving—march of geopolitics and displacement
through abstraction, architecture, landscape, movement and figuration.
Mehretu’s massive canvases (the paintings in a series on the
spacious first floor stretch the height of the wall) are packed with
tiny details that, even if they disappear from afar, create a sense of
movement and energy that radiates from within the paintings. Colorful
shapes and quick strokes swirl together to conjure mini worlds that
compress both time and space. Mehretu often incorporates line drawings
of buildings, both past and present, in her canvases—in Berliner
Plätze the ghosts of buildings bombed during World War II rise
together in a hazy town square, while the bowl-shaped Stadia II ,
with its flag-like adornments, seems to conjure an Olympic stadium and
a Roman colosseum. Mehretu usually doesn’t directly depict political
movements and societal shifts, but her works evoke the attitudes of
the time they were painted, whether during the War on Terror or the
Arab Spring. Mehretu’s most recent works, though, do correspond a
bit more directly with history; the hot, ashen chaos of Hineni (3:4)
is built atop a blurred photo of one of the 2017 Northern California
wildfires.
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03/04/2020 Last update