WHIRLYGIG!: Sikkema Malloy Jenkins
Mark Thomas Gibson approaches the chaos and contradictions of America's present as an ever-evolving condition of its own past. Through painting and drawing, his imagery engages the traditions of history painting and caricature, emphasizing the intrinsic surrealities of American culture and its tendency towards mythologizing itself. Gibson employs the aesthetics of satirical cartoons in his work for the immediacy of their subversive, concise messaging. Simultaneously reflecting, critiquing, and mocking societal power structures and cultural hegemonies, Gibson's work presents a narrative vision of America that implicates both creator and viewer as active participants within its story.
The works in WHIRLYGIG! directly address the tumultuous social and political events that have come to define the first quarter of the 21st century. This selection of works visualizes the relentless flow of information inundating social networks, news channels, and media outlets. A wide array of motifs and characters evolve in Gibson's world, including steam pipes that scream while you work, trip wires that catch you on your way out, and a vibrant green path of musical phrases that snakes through the crowd at a rally. All the while, white gloved magic acts are prayed over by clasped hands with even whiter knuckles. Down the way, captured Klan hoods wave in the breeze past sticky situations that lose their hold of entangled legs as they churn. It's a WHIRLYGIG!
Initially conceived of as an examination of the early Biden presidency, this body of work soon evolved into a larger interrogation of American ideologies and their underlying subtexts. In Rally Jams (2022), this sense of timeless pandemonium abounds. A bright green knot bearing excerpts of quotable songs envelope a pair of disembodied, clasped hands and striding feet, while the ghostly eyes of a Klan hood peek from the corner. Another set of hands along the top of the painting incites the horns of a bison with a brandished red flag; the entire composition is illuminated by the glow of a toy sword, set ablaze as a burning cross and lying on the ground in front. Confronting these dystopic manifestations head-on, WHIRLYGIG! offers a striking assessment of a shared time and space within the mediated disorientation of our current reality.
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John Yao of WHIRLYGIG! in Hyperallergic
March 19, 2023MARK THOMAS GIBSON’S CARTOONS SEE THE US GOING NOWHERE By: John Yao 'This is one reason why Mark Thomas Gibson is an artist of our...Read more -
David Whelan on WHIRLYGIG! in the Brooklyn Rail
March 15, 2023Mark Thomas Gibson: WHIRLYGIG! By David Whelan 'Perhaps it’s true with art that things are more powerful and more terrifying when left unsaid. The mere...Read more
- SATURDAY 10 TO 6
MARK THOMAS GIBSON
WHIRLYGIG!
February 3 - March 11, 2023
Sikkema Jenkins & Co. is pleased to present WHIRLYGIG!, a
solo exhibition of recent work by Mark Thomas Gibson. The
drawings and paintings featured here were produced during
Gibson's 2021-22 Hodder Fellowship at Princeton University,
and shown in the exhibition HERE YE, HEAR YE!! at
Princeton's Lewis Center for the Arts. WHIRLYGIG! will be on
view February 3 through March 11, 2023.
Mark Thomas Gibson approaches the chaos and
contradictions of America's present as an ever-evolving
condition of its own past. Through painting and drawing, his
imagery engages the traditions of history painting and
caricature, emphasizing the intrinsic surrealities of American
culture and its tendency towards mythologizing itself. Gibson
employs the aesthetics of satirical cartoons in his work for the
immediacy of their subversive, concise messaging.
Simultaneously reflecting, critiquing, and mocking societal
power structures and cultural hegemonies, Gibson's work
presents a narrative vision of America that implicates both
creator and viewer as active participants within its story.
The works in WHIRLYGIG! directly address the tumultuous
social and political events that have come to define the first
quarter of the 21st century. This selection of works visualizes
the relentless flow of information inundating social networks,
news channels, and media outlets. A wide array of motifs and
characters evolve in Gibson's world, including steam pipes
that scream while you work, trip wires that catch you on your
way out, and a vibrant green path of musical phrases that
snakes through the crowd at a rally. All the while, white gloved
magic acts are prayed over by clasped hands with even
whiter knuckles. Down the way, captured Klan hoods wave in
the breeze past sticky situations that lose their hold of
entangled legs as they churn. It's a WHIRLYGIG!
Initially conceived of as an examination of the early Biden
presidency, this body of work soon evolved into a larger
interrogation of American ideologies and their underlying
subtexts. In Rally Jams (2022), this sense of timeless
pandemonium abounds. A bright green knot bearing excerpts
of quotable songs envelope a pair of disembodied, clasped
hands and striding feet, while the ghostly eyes of a Klan hood
peek from the corner. Another set of hands along the top of
the painting incites the horns of a bison with a brandished red
flag; the entire composition is illuminated by the glow of a toy
sword, set ablaze as a burning cross and lying on the ground
in front. Confronting these dystopic manifestations head-on,
WHIRLYGIG! offers a striking assessment of a shared time
and space within the mediated disorientation of our current
reality.
Mark Thomas Gibson (b. 1980, Miami, FL) received his BFA
from The Cooper Union in 2002 and his MFA from Yale
School of Art in 2013. In 2022, Gibson was awarded a
Guggenheim Fellowship; he was also a 2021-22 Hodder
Fellow at Princeton University and received a Pew Fellowship
from the Pew Center for Arts and Heritage in 2021. He was
awarded residencies at Yaddo, Saratoga Springs, NY, and
the Elizabeth Murray Artist Residency by Collarworks, Troy,
NY, in 2021; he was also a resident at the MacDowell Colony,
Peterborough, NH, in 2017. In 2016, Gibson co-curated the
traveling exhibition Black Pulp! with William Villalongo. He has
released two artist books, Early Retirement (2017), and Some
Monsters Loom Large (2016).