桃瘾社区

Wide shot of the art gallery

To Be Made Whole

This exhibition was on view June 2鈥揝eptember 14, 2023.

桃瘾社区 Art Gallery is pleased to present 鈥淭o Be Made Whole,鈥 an exhibition featuring artists , , , , , and who each unravel and reassemble identity via a synthesis of representational imagery and tactile textiles. The exhibit opens with a free public reception on Friday, June 2, from 5:00 p.m.鈥7:00 p.m. and was co-curated by Professor , the gallery director, and Francisco Maldonado 鈥23, who received a research assistantship from 桃瘾社区鈥檚 .

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Abstract artwork from Jalandoni for the To Be Made Whole Exhibition
Jeanne F. Jalandoni
To the end of the Path
oil on canvas, weaving, machine knits, fabric paint, 71" x 55" x 4"
2023

The six artists in the exhibit fabricate fuller and more complex understandings of identity, culture, and history through their work. Maldonado notes, 鈥淚n this show, we review art that combines representation and fabrication as a means to explore our collective identities and memory as well.鈥 Their unique amalgamations are tangible forms of visual storytelling in which illustrative images are literally stitched or woven together to form complete narratives.

Jalandoni, for example, states that her paint and textile pieces 鈥渘avigate the complexities and tangibility of being culturally Filipino American as a 2nd generation New Yorker,鈥 reflecting that 鈥渢he intricate process and performance of building a textile also has its references to journey-making and time-stamping.鈥

Similarly, Zexter elaborates that, 鈥淭he thread acts as a connection between the person and myself or place that I have photographed. I always think of the photograph as something from the past and the thread as a reaction to the past and present.鈥

Additionally, inspired by her mother who immigrated to the US in 1950s and worked in the garment industry, Alba says, 鈥淐reating these works out of textiles pays tribute to the material creativity as an act of agency across diasporic communities.鈥

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Abstract artwork from Sanchez for the To Be Made Whole Exhibition
Juan S谩nchez
Para Martin Luther King, Jr.
oil, acrylic, mixed media collage on wood panel, 74" x 72"
2008

Meanwhile, Beach reimagines African-American quilts as shrouds. Haunted by the image of Michael Brown鈥檚 body lying uncared for in the street, he says, 鈥淢y heart ached not only for the brutality that led to that moment but for the lack of tenderness in its aftermath鈥he quilt could serve as protection and allow him to maintain his dignity and respect as it blanketed him.鈥

By combining photo-related and fiber arts鈥攂oth widely accessible quotidian processes that many viewers practice personally, the artists in 鈥淭o Be Made Whole鈥 simultaneously examine not how these materials function independently, but rather in conversation. At this generative intersection, they illuminate the ways identities are pieced together and demonstrate our collective capacity to be active participants in their creation.

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New York Council of the Arts logo

This exhibit, which remains on view through Thursday, September 14, 2023, is made possible by the with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature. All of the gallery鈥檚 exhibits and events are free and open to the public. Regular gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 12:30 p.m.鈥4:30 p.m. and by appointment.

Installation photographs in gallery by Adam Reich.

Artist Biographies

Elia Alba

Born in the U.S. to parents who immigrated from the Dominican Republic, (she/her) is a multidisciplinary artist, whose practice is concerned with the social and political complexity of race, identity, and the collective community. She received her BA from Hunter College and completed the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program. She has exhibited throughout the U.S. and abroad including at the Studio Museum in Harlem, Stedelijk Museum, Amsterdam; Science Museum, London; Smithsonian Museum of Art, El Museo del Barrio, National Museum of Art, and Reina Sof铆a, Madrid. Awards include the Studio Museum in Harlem Artist-in Residency, Pollock-Krasner Foundation Grant, Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant, Anonymous Was A Woman Award, and the Latinx Artist Fellowship. Collections include the Smithsonian Museum of Art, El Museo del Barrio, and Lowe Art Museum. Her work has been reviewed in the New York Times, Art Forum, ArtNews, and Forbes. She was part of the curatorial team for El Museo del Barrio鈥檚 critically acclaimed exhibition, Estamos Bien: La Trienal 20/21. Her book, Elia Alba, The Supper Club (Hirmer, 2019) brings together artists, scholars, and performers of diasporic cultures, through photography, food, and dialogue to examine race and culture in the United States. She lives and works in the Bronx.

Desmond Beach

is a New York City artist and educator who explores race, identity, and social justice themes in his artistic practice. Through his work, Beach aims to transform the tragedies of the transatlantic slave trade and the Jim Crow America South into a celebration of fully living Black life. Beach has an extensive background in teaching and has served as a visiting lecturer/artist at various institutions, including Coppin State University, Emerson College, Morgan State University, and College of the Atlantic. He has also been a fellow at the Fine Arts Work Center in Provincetown and Skidmore College, among others. He has exhibited at museums including The Phillips Collection (DC), Katonah Museum of Art (NY), the Neuberger Museum of Art (NY), and The Contemporary Museum (MD) and had recent solo shows at Delaware Valley Arts Alliance (NY), Chesapeake Gallery (MD), and Evanston Art Center (IL). His educational background includes an MFA from the Rinehart School of Sculpture at the Maryland Institute College of Art (MICA), where he also earned his BFA. Currently, Beach is a PhD candidate in Creative Practice at the University of Plymouth in England.

Nicholas Cueva

(b. Dana Point, CA, 1983) received his MFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 2011 and has lived in New York since. He has exhibited widely throughout the United States, including group exhibitions at the Torrance Museum of Art (CA) and Ess Ef Eff (Brooklyn, NY) and solo exhibitions at MPTSN and Dreamboat (Chicago, IL), among others. The Sex Wax paintings on fabric draw from his upbringing in the Calvary Chapel Surfing Association, a self-described 鈥渟urfing church.鈥 His work examines surfing from a personal perspective, presenting it as a nexus of emotional resonances and fatalistic paradoxes, all the while exploring its intrinsically dynamic formal qualities. Born with Truncus Arteriosus, a rare congenital heart defect that left him physically weak, he was rarely able to surf and felt like an outsider looking in.

Jeanne F. Jalandoni

is a painter and textile artist, based in NYC. Her work navigates Filipino American cultural identity through personal research and experiences as a second generation American. She uses national symbols such as the carabao, bangus to express characteristics she associates with her biculturalism, in an attempt to redefine the Filipino American narrative. Jalandoni received her BFA in Studio Art from NYU, and had solo shows with Taymour Grahne Projects and Real Art Ways. She exhibited in group shows with Jeffrey Deitch, Ben Brown Fine Arts, Textile Arts Center, and Asia Society Texas Center. Jalandoni was an artist-in-residence at 36 Chase & Barns (2018), the Textile Arts Center (2021), and ChaNorth Artist Residency (2022). Jeanne is a recipient of the Real Art Award, and the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Creative Engagement Grant (2019).

Juan S谩nchez

was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1954 to working class immigrant parents. He earned a BFA from The Cooper Union School of Art and a MFA from Rutgers. Maintaining an activist stance for over forty-five years, he establishes his art as an arena of creative and political inquiry that encompasses the individual, family, the communities with which he engages, and the world at large. Sa虂nchez has received many grants and fellowships including the John Simon Guggenheim Foundation, the Joan Mitchell Foundation, the New York Foundation for the Arts, the Pollock-Krasner Foundation, the National Endowment for the Arts, and the CUAA Augustus Saint Gaulden Achievement in the Visual Arts Award. He has exhibited internationally including major solo exhibitions at BRIC Arts/Media House, Zoellner Arts Center, MoMA PS1 Contemporary Art Center, Bronx Museum of the Arts, Jersey City Museum, and EXIT ART. His art is in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern Art, El Museo del Barrio, the Smithsonian Museum of American Art, El Instituto de Cultura Puertorrique帽a, and El Centro Wilfredo Lam in Cuba. S谩nchez is Professor of Art at Hunter College.

Melissa Zexter

was born in Rhode Island and currently lives in Brooklyn, New York. She holds a BFA in Photography from the Rhode Island School of Design and an MFA from New York University. Zexter has exhibited throughout the United States and internationally including shows at Muriel Guepin Gallery (NY), The Triennial Design Museum in Milan, Italy, The Fuller Craft Museum (MA), Robert Mann Gallery (NY), and the Bronx Museum of the Arts. Her work has been published and reviewed in numerous publications including AfterImage, ELEPHANT, Juxtapoz, The New York Times, The Boston Herald, The New Yorker, Art New England, BUST, and New York Magazine. Zexter combines embroidery with photography. She sews by hand directly onto photographs she has taken, combining a traditional practical skill, embroidery with a modern and mass reproducible process, photography. The artist鈥檚 fundamental concern is to explore the photograph's material status as three-dimensional object as well as to examine issues of identity, memory and technology.