Ed Bereal | Art Basel Miami Beach 2023: Disturbing the Peace

 
 
 
 
 

December 6 - 10, 2023
Miami Beach Convention Center, Florida

Ed Bereal
has been a central figure in the West Coast art scene since his work first came to public attention in the legendary War Babies exhibition (1961, Huysman Gallery) which was the first fully integrated art exhibition in Los Angeles. An active member of the West Coast Assemblage/Collage movement with artists Ed Kienholz, George Hermes, Wallace Berman, Jess, Joe Goode, Bettye Saar, and John Otterbridge, Bereal rapidly distinguished his work through the integration of Expressionist gesture with classical drawing skills, and the use of Pop Art references with sharply political racial satire. The 1965 Watts Rebellion (“Riot” in the mainstream media) that was literally outside his studio door, caused Bereal to reassess the early privileged success he enjoyed in the rarefied world of major gallery and museum exhibitions with the emotional need to dig deeper into his own identity as a Black man and the reality of making works in support of political change. In the ensuing radical reordering of his practice and imagery, he withdrew from most exhibition opportunities and moved into performance work, video production, community-based street theater, and began to create a confrontational imagery that refused to sit quietly on the wall or pedestal as “high-end luxury goods.” Bereal has observed about this period, “...the deeper I got into the ghetto the further the art scene started to fade.”

For Art Basel Miami Beach we offer a through line of significant works that illuminate the artist’s journey of discovery and actualization; revealing iconographic evolution and innovative materiality in his works. Our presentation features a wall of insightful self-portrait drawings (1958-1965) that evidence the artist’s superb draftsmanship and use of an often emotionally-charged gestural line to capture and expose his growing awareness of himself as a young Black artist in the world - from tender realism to bold near- abstraction, each session staring into the mirror reveals another state of being. The second wall focuses on the evolution of Bereal’s vision and trenchant social commentary in a photographic diptych "mugshot" from 1998 depicting the artist as he parodies American racial stereotypes. The poignant paired images interrogate America's racist history and racial present. At once an accusation and indictment, this powerful diptych peels away layers of historic minstrel farce to reveal a societal root of racial animus that shreds civility and convention. The final work is the first showing of a newly editioned video piece, Pull Your Coat (1986), which grew out of Bereal’s gorilla theater group the Bodacious Buggerilla. Using the format of a popular television game show, the work is a witty, fast-paced sendup of American racist tropes and actions that pillories the status quo and its foundation of institutionalized racism and capitalism; trenchantly true and painful, the work is as powerful today as it was thirty-seven years ago.

Ed Bereal attended Chouinard Art Institute from 1959-1962 and later taught at University of California, Irvine and Western Washington University. His work is in the collection of The Museum of Modern Art (New York, NY); The Smithsonian Institute (Washington D.C.); Los Angeles County Museum of Art (Los Angeles, CA); San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (San Francisco, CA); Museum of Fine Arts (Houston, TX); and The Brooklyn Museum (Brooklyn NY) among others. Recent exhibitions include the Centre Georges Pompidou (Paris, France) in 2006 and Moderna Museet (Stockholm, Sweden) in 2009; L.A. Object & David Hammons Body Prints, Tilton Gallery (New York, NY) in 2006; as well as participating in Pacific Standard Time at The Getty Museum (Los Angeles, CA) in 2011. His first significant museum retrospective, Wanted: Ed Bereal for Disturbing the Peace at the Whatcom Museum of Art (Bellingham, WA) was in 2019 and Bereal’s APEX installation at The Portland Art Museum (Portland, OR) was on view February 23, 2020 through June 27, 2021. Both of these recent exhibitions included publications. Bereal has been represented by Elizabeth Leach Gallery since 1998. 

 
 
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