Wednesday, July 23, 2025
  • Login
SB Crypto Guru News- latest crypto news, NFTs, DEFI, Web3, Metaverse
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • BITCOIN
  • CRYPTO UPDATES
    • GENERAL
    • ALTCOINS
    • ETHEREUM
    • CRYPTO EXCHANGES
    • CRYPTO MINING
  • BLOCKCHAIN
  • NFT
  • DEFI
  • WEB3
  • METAVERSE
  • REGULATIONS
  • SCAM ALERT
  • ANALYSIS
CRYPTO MARKETCAP
  • HOME
  • BITCOIN
  • CRYPTO UPDATES
    • GENERAL
    • ALTCOINS
    • ETHEREUM
    • CRYPTO EXCHANGES
    • CRYPTO MINING
  • BLOCKCHAIN
  • NFT
  • DEFI
  • WEB3
  • METAVERSE
  • REGULATIONS
  • SCAM ALERT
  • ANALYSIS
No Result
View All Result
SB Crypto Guru News- latest crypto news, NFTs, DEFI, Web3, Metaverse
No Result
View All Result

Denzil Forrester finds freedom in music

by SB Crypto Guru News
November 22, 2024
in NFT
Reading Time: 8 mins read
0 0
A A
0


Denzil Forrester has weird timing. In 2016, less than a week before the election that gave Donald Trump his wretched first term in the White House, the Grenadian British artist made his US debut at White Columns. This year, the 67-year-old artist’s return to New York just two weeks before an even more crazy-making election created an element of foreboding. Forrester was infectiously optimistic at the opening of Two Islands, One World, a 41-year survey of paintings and drawings (1973 to 2024) curated by Sheena Wagstaff. Or so said Forrester’s dealer, Stephen Friedman. “Selected,” replied the Metropolitan Museum’s chair emerita of Modern and contemporary art. “Not curated.”

Most of the paintings that Friedman is presenting in Tribeca, with Andrew Kreps Gallery, depict scenes of close community: underground reggae dance clubs that Forrester frequented in London in the 1980s, and snapshot-like views of his siblings at work in their single mother’s home business, making handbags. Sewing machines are a central feature of several paintings at Kreps that fairly vibrate in pink, lavender, orange and blue. At Friedman, the darker nightclub scenes are crowded with commingling figures. Faces are indistinct but it’s clear there’s a party going on.

Denzil Forrester, Tutti-Frutti, 2024. © Denzil Forrester. Courtesy the artist and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London and New York. Photo by Todd-White Art Photography.

Forrester brings a transporting sense of space to his work, allowing him to squeeze cubistically stylised bodies into a single perspective. He gives that mashup a twist in the show’s one outdoor scene, Death Walk (1983), where helmeted figures drag the limp body of another man down a dark alley towards a police van. Here, the view is at once aerial and from the rear, making the subject look as if he is floating above the street, free as a bird.

Forrester imagined the scene but based its narrative on an actual incident involving Winston Rose, a close friend with a mental illness who was killed in police custody in 1981. No charges were filed, and the death was never explained. It motivated Forrester to write his graduate thesis at the Royal College of Art on police violence towards London’s Afro Caribbean population, a situation later dramatised by Steve McQueen in his 2022 Amazon Prime series Small Axe (named after the Bob Marley song).

While Forrester was telling me this story, I couldn’t help thinking of Michael Stewart, the Black graffiti artist who was arrested in 1983 by New York City transit police for tagging an East Village subway wall and then beaten badly enough to cause his death. No officers were sentenced. Forrester wasn’t aware of either Stewart or the painting that Jean-Michel Basquiat made to memorialise his friend (The Death of Michael Stewart, 1983), but the parallels were striking to both of us.

Gripping work

In a side room, Wagstaff had placed a single, mural-size canvas, Funeral of Winston Rose (1981). To my eye it is the most gripping work in the show—partly because Forrester set the funeral in a nightclub. “I put the coffin where the DJ booth would be,” he says, with no small pride. The coffin lid is half pulled back. Rose’s wife is leaning over the body. Friends—again, seen from a slightly elevated position behind them—crowd the open casket. “I put in this boat,” Forrester adds, gesturing toward a sailing vessel at the top of the picture, “to take Winston to his next life.”

I was reminded of Emmett Till, the Black teenager from Chicago who was shot to death and mutilated by a white mob in Mississippi in 1955, supposedly for whistling at a white woman. Till’s mother insisted on an open casket to show the thousands at the funeral—and the nation that saw the photographs—the full horror of what had transpired. It jumpstarted the Civil Rights movement. Yet that same image only brought heat to Dana Schutz for her empathetic but more abstract rendering, Open Casket (2016), shown at the 2017 Whitney Biennial. Clearly, our histories are entwined and our cultures are not that far apart.

Denzil Forrester, Eula & Sons (TBC), 2024 © Denzil Forrester. Courtesy the artist and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London and New York. Photo by Todd-White Art Photography

The galleries’ dinner for Forrester and his wife, the artist Phillippa Clayden, took place at a nearby Chinese restaurant. “Several years ago, Denzil commented that the clubs he continues to frequent [in Cornwall, where he lives now] are a continuation of city life with spiritual fulfilment,” Wagstaff noted in her toast. “He added…that due to ‘the deep hypnotic and ancestral beat, dub music makes one feel purified, strong and free of the complicated network we live in’.”

To that I say, amen! The minute Wagstaff sat down, White Columns director Matthew Higgs made a beeline for a rented deck to spin dub-music records for the guests. In an instant, I found myself on my feet and dancing with the exuberant Forrester. He was still at it when I left. Yes, I thought to myself, as my election jitters faded, dancing is a salve. Combine it with an artful telling of social history, and whatever happens next, you can light the dark.

Denzil Forrester, Blue Jay, 1987. © Denzil Forrester. Courtesy the artist and Stephen Friedman Gallery, London and New York. Photo by Todd-White Art Photography.

  • Denzil Forrester: Two Islands, One World, until 18 December, Stephen Friedman Gallery and Andrew Kreps Gallery, New York



Source link

Tags: Bitcoin NewsCrypto NewsCrypto UpdatesDenzilfindsForresterFreedomLatest News on CryptomusicSB Crypto Guru News
Previous Post

Feel Good Friday: Bitcoin Approaches 100k, China Bitcoin Ban, MicroStrategy Collapse Theory

Next Post

Shorters Pile in on MSTR: Citron Research Warns Microstrategy’s Bull Run Could Burst

Related Posts

Turn YouTube Into a Business Growth Engine With These Easy Tactics

Turn YouTube Into a Business Growth Engine With These Easy Tactics

by SB Crypto Guru News
July 23, 2025
0

Opinions expressed by Entrepreneur contributors are their own. YouTube is full of opportunity, but also a lot of noise. For...

French culture minister Rachida Dati to face trial for alleged corruption – The Art Newspaper

French culture minister Rachida Dati to face trial for alleged corruption – The Art Newspaper

by SB Crypto Guru News
July 23, 2025
0

The French culture minister Rachida Dati is to face trial in Paris on charges of alleged corruption and “influence peddling” from...

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Is Terrified About AI Bank Fraud

OpenAI CEO Sam Altman Is Terrified About AI Bank Fraud

by SB Crypto Guru News
July 22, 2025
0

Sam Altman, the CEO of $300 billion AI startup OpenAI, is asking finance industry leaders to stay ahead of AI...

Chili’s Is Selling Boots, Belts Made From Its Red Booths

Chili’s Is Selling Boots, Belts Made From Its Red Booths

by SB Crypto Guru News
July 22, 2025
0

Chili's Grill & Bar is partnering with Texas-footwear brand Tecovas to launch a limited-edition collection of "Booth Boots," which is...

Italian culture minister embroiled in row with prominent historian who criticised government policy – The Art Newspaper

Italian culture minister embroiled in row with prominent historian who criticised government policy – The Art Newspaper

by SB Crypto Guru News
July 22, 2025
0

Italy’s culture minister, Alessandro Giuli, has called for a prominent historian and political commentator to resign from a council role...

Load More
Next Post
Shorters Pile in on MSTR: Citron Research Warns Microstrategy’s Bull Run Could Burst

Shorters Pile in on MSTR: Citron Research Warns Microstrategy’s Bull Run Could Burst

Susan Kare Transforms Esc Keys into Pixel Art Masterpieces

Susan Kare Transforms Esc Keys into Pixel Art Masterpieces

Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Tumblr RSS

CATEGORIES

  • Altcoin
  • Analysis
  • Bitcoin
  • Blockchain
  • Crypto Exchanges
  • Crypto Updates
  • DeFi
  • Ethereum
  • Metaverse
  • Mining
  • NFT
  • Regulations
  • Scam Alert
  • Uncategorized
  • Web3

SITE MAP

  • Disclaimer
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact us

Copyright © 2022 - SB Crypto Guru News.
SB Crypto Guru News is not responsible for the content of external sites.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
No Result
View All Result
  • HOME
  • BITCOIN
  • CRYPTO UPDATES
    • GENERAL
    • ALTCOINS
    • ETHEREUM
    • CRYPTO EXCHANGES
    • CRYPTO MINING
  • BLOCKCHAIN
  • NFT
  • DEFI
  • WEB3
  • METAVERSE
  • REGULATIONS
  • SCAM ALERT
  • ANALYSIS

Copyright © 2022 - SB Crypto Guru News.
SB Crypto Guru News is not responsible for the content of external sites.