Joe Ray (artist)
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Joe Ray (born 1944) is an American artist based in Los Angeles.Dambrot, Shana Nys
"Joe Ray: Complexion Constellation, Diane Rosenstein Gallery,"
''Art and Cake'', August 1, 2017. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Schad, Ed, "Interview with Joe Ray," ''ArtSlant'', October 23, 2011. Retrieved July 18, 2022. His work has moved between abstraction and representation and mediums including painting, sculpture, performance art and photography.Wagley Catherine. "5 Free Art Shows to See in L.A. This Week: Joe Ray," ''LA Weekly'', July 26, 2017.McCash, Doug

''The Times-Picayune'', December 11, 2014. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Sirmans, Franklin (et al). "Joe Ray,
''Prospect.3: Notes for Now''
, New Orleans, LA: Prospect New Orleans/U.S. Biennial, Inc., 2014. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
He began his career in the early 1960s and belonged to several notable art communities in Los Angeles, including the Light and Space movement;Wagley Catherine
"Into the Light,"
''Waves'', No. 2, 2021, p. 76–87. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Smith, Richard Candida. "African-American Artists of Los Angeles: John W. Outterbridge," University of California, Los Angeles, 2011. early cast-resin sculptors, including Larry Bell;Plagens, Peter
"Los Angeles: The Market Street Program,"
''Artforum'', January 1972. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
and the influential 1970s African-American collective,
Studio Z A studio is an artist or worker's workroom. This can be for the purpose of acting, architecture, painting, pottery (ceramics), sculpture, origami, woodworking, scrapbooking, photography, graphic design, filmmaking, animation, industrial design, ...
, of which he was a founding member with artists such as David Hammons,
Senga Nengudi Senga Nengudi (née Sue Irons; born September 18, 1943) is an African-American visual artist and curator. She is best known for her abstract sculptures that combine found objects and choreographed performance. She is part of a group of African-A ...
and Houston Conwill.Phelan, Peggy
''Live Art in LA: Performance in Southern California, 1970-1983''
, Routledge, 2012. P. 159. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Bonsu, Osei
"I Believe Deeply that the Best Kind of Art is Public,"
''Frieze'', September 22, 2018. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Philadelphia Museum of Art
"Major Exhibition Dedicated to Senga Nengudi to Open in Philadelphia May 2, the Only East Coast Venue,"
April 9, 2021. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
Critic Catherine Wagley described Ray as "an artist far more committed to understanding all kinds of light and space (cosmic, psychic, spiritual, and geographical) than to any specific material or strategy"—a tendency that she and others have suggested led to his being under-recognized.Dambrot, Shana Nys. "The Galleries of the Hollywood Media District: Diane Rosenstein," ''LA Weekly'', August 16–22, 2019. Ray has exhibited at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles (MOCA), Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), Contemporary Arts Museum Houston, and the Museum of African-American Art in Los Angeles, among other venues.''Artnet''
"'The Artist’s Museum' at L.A.MOCA,"
August 18, 2010. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
"Celebrating Black History Month—Modern Collection Highlights,"
Collection, February 24, 2021. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Barron, Stephanie, Sheri Bernstein and Ilene Susan Fort
''Made In California: Art, Image and Identity, 1900 - 2000''
, Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2000. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Gershon, Pete
''Collision: The Contemporary Art Scene in Houston, 1972–1985''
, Texas A&M University Press, 2018, p. 133. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Nilson, Lisbet

''Los Angeles Times'', October 7, 1990. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
His artwork belongs to the public collections of LACMA and the
Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art The Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art (NEHMA) is an accredited academic art museum focused on modern and contemporary art at Utah State University in Logan, Utah. NEHMA was founded in 1982 with the ceramic collection of philanthropist and namesake ...
.Los Angeles County Museum of Art
''US'', Joe Ray
, Collections. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Los Angeles County Museum of Art
''Untitled'', Joe Ray
, Collections. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art
Joe Ray
Artist-Maker. Retrieved July 18, 2022.


Early life and career

Ray was born in Beaumont, Texas in 1944 and raised in Alexandria, Louisiana. After taking high school courses in industrial metalwork, art and music, he studied fine arts at the University of Southwestern Louisiana, one of only a few black students in the previously segregated college.Contemporary Arts Center New Orleans
"Joe Ray,"
Artists. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
In 1963, he traveled to Los Angeles by bus and soon joined its diverse, still-undefined art scene. He was drafted into the U.S. Army and sent to serve in Vietnam in 1965, two weeks after the Watts Rebellion. When he returned from Vietnam in 1967, Ray settled in the
Leimert Park Leimert Park (; ) is a neighborhood in the South Los Angeles region of Los Angeles, California. Developed in the 1920s as a mainly residential community, it features Spanish Colonial Revival homes and tree-lined streets. The Life Magazine/Lei ...
neighborhood of Los Angeles, a burgeoning center of historical and contemporary African-American culture, and began experimenting with resin-based sculpture alongside others such as Larry Bell, Doug Edge and Terry O'Shea. Ray first showed his artwork in the 1969 4th Annual Watts Summer Festival Art Exhibition, and subsequently received recognition through group exhibitions at SFMOMA, Oakland Museum of California, Long Beach Museum of Art, and LACMA ("24 Young Los Angeles Artists," 1971; "10 Years of Contemporary Art Council Acquisitions," 1973).Tuchman, Maurice. ''Ten Years of Contemporary Art Council Acquisitions: Inaugurating The New Contemporary Art Galleries'', Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 1973. After receiving a Young Talent Award from LACMA in 1970, he enrolled in the first class at the new California Institute of the Arts, where he studied with John Baldessari, Allan Kaprow and Nam June Paik. While there, he experimented with performance, photography and video art and graduated with a BFA in the inaugural class of 1973.Fox, Howard N. "Tremors in Paradise 1960-1980," i
''Made In California: Art, Image and Identity, 1900 - 2000''
, Stephanie Barron, Sheri Bernstein and Ilene Susan Fort, Los Angeles: Los Angeles County Museum of Art, 2000. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
''ArtDaily''
"Independent 20th Century announcing details of the artistic program,"
News, 2018. Retrieved July 19, 2022.
Between 1978 and 1980, he was one of fifteen original members of the MOCA Los Angeles Artists Advisory Council, alongside Vija Celmins, Robert Irwin and others. In his later career, Ray was included in the LACMA exhibition, "Made In California: Art, Image and Identity (1900–2000)," the assemblage-art survey "L.A. Object & David Hammons Body Prints" (2007, Tilton Gallery, New York; Roberts & Tilton, Los Angeles),"Left Coast,"
''Artnet'', June 26, 2007. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Rogers Tilton, Connie and Lindsay Charlwood (eds)
''L.A. Object & David Hammons Body Prints''
New York/Los Angeles: Jack Tilton Gallery/ Roberts & Tilton Gallery, 2011. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
"The Artist's Museum" (MOCA LA, 2010), and Prospect.3 in New Orleans, among others.Lee Reynolds, Rebecca
"Prospect.3: The 'Other' Biennial,"
''Burnaway–The Voice of Art in the South'', January 15, 2015. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
In 2017, a 50-year survey of his work, "Complexion Constellation," took place at Diane Rosenstein Gallery in Los Angeles.


Work and reception

Ray's work in the 1960s and 1970s ranged from abstract cast-resin sculpture to documentary-like photography and performance-related works. Critics suggest that the two latter types of work speak to an element of identity that has permeated his otherwise non-figurative practice and differentiated him from other cast-resin and Light and Space artists.Rice, Leland
''Photographs by Southern California Painters and Sculptors''
, Santa Barbara, CA: University of California, 1977. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Krull, Craig, ''Photographing the L.A. Art Scene 1955-1975'', Santa Monica, CA: Smart Art Press, 1996. Retrieved July 18, 2022. Beginning in the late 1970s, he focused more on abstract and symbolic mixed-media paintings that investigate inner and outer space and issues involving racial identity and inequality. Critic Shana Nys Dambrot has written that the apparent eclecticism of Ray's practice "nevertheless posits a thread of conceptual and aesthetic gestalt that links all his works on a continuum of light, color, optical/ambiguous phenomena, and the sociopolitical context for perception, portraiture, performance, and abstraction."


Cast-resin sculpture

In the mid-1960s, Ray began exploring sculpture cast with resin, a new material for artists that—along with light—came to define the Light and Space movement. These sculptors, including Ray, embraced both scientific, technical aspects of the material and its more esoteric, perception-altering properties, such as the ability to take on solid form and be animated by transient light and movement in its surroundings.Schad, Ed
"Joe Ray, Rings and Spheres,"
Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art, Utah State University. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Ray's early resin sculptures were translucent and employed basic shapes: pristine spheres, half-spheres, arcs and rings. He added pigments to them—in some cases candy-colored hues (''Two Arcs and Half-Sphere'', 1969) and in others black and white values, as in ''New Eye'' (1969). The latter work connected him to both Light and Space artists and—with its black and white tubes referencing racial issues—to an alternative, African-American art world south of Freeway 10, centered around Leimert Park,
Alonzo Davis Alonzo Davis is an African-American artist and academic known for co-founding the Brockman Gallery in Los Angeles with his brother Dale Brockman Davis. In reaction to a perceived lack of coverage of black art, Davis became an advocate for black ...
's Brockman Gallery, and Gallery 32.Russeth, Andrew
"New Books on Christopher D'Arcangelo and African-American Artists in Los Angeles,"
''Observer'', September 13, 2011. Retrieved July 18, 2022.
Ray's resin works convey his interests in science and spirit, euphoric perception, the individual human body and its systems, and the cosmos. His later ''Rings and Spheres'' (1980–3) has been described as a work of painstaking craftsmanship whose seven deep-colored, opaque rings and spheres placed side-by-side conjure a wide range of metaphors. Curator Ed Schad wrote, the sculpture "draws a humanistic line from the infinitesimal world of the atomic nucleus through the structure of the human heart to the patterns of stars and solar systems," with its seven pairings linking to that number's "mystical and numerological meanings, adding a cryptic edge."


Photography and performance-related work

Curators situate Ray's 1970s photography among artists drawn to recording daily urban life and the sometimes-uneasy relationship between people and their surroundings. In 1970, he returned to his Louisiana hometown and photographed the children, adults, shotgun houses and streets there. The candid, documentary-like portraits—31 black-and-white, gelatin-silver prints—comprised the "Untitled" series (1970–2), which conveyed his feeling about the neighborhood and its life, while charting the scope of his own trajectory over time and place. Contemporaneous to that series were Ray's collaborative performance art projects—humorous scenarios and staged live events that were often documented in photographs and video. These included, for example, a human car wash, for which he and friends dressed as large, floppy brushes and covered themselves in white foam, and an on-stage descent on ropes from a ceiling trapdoor during a music concert. In 1971, Ray, Terry O’Shea and Doug Edge were featured in the inaugural exhibition of the Market Street Program (1971–3), an early, artist- and socially driven project supported by Walter Hopps and Robert Irwin.Shipper, Merle. "The Market Street Program," ''ArtScene'', September 1995.Simms, Matthew. ''Mapping the Los Angeles Art Underground: The Market Street Program 1971-1973'', Archives of American Art Journal, Smithsonian Institution, 2015. Rather than present their individual resin sculpture, they chose to experiment as a trio with conceptual ideas and photography exploring popular clichés about contemporary artists—as dandy, outsider, libertine or romantic—titling the result, "The Fantasy Show." Their images included a tacky,
Buñuel Buñuel is a town and municipality located in the province and autonomous community of Navarre, northern Spain , image_flag = Bandera de España.svg , image_coat = Escudo de España (mazonado).svg , national_motto ...
-like black-tie banquet for three; a scruffy, shirtless biker scenario spoofing machismo; and a poker game with Ray and three women, referencing the famed 1963 Duchamp photograph of himself playing chess in the Pasadena Art Museum.


Painting

In the late 1970s, Ray's interest in the phenomenological qualities of resin led him to contemplations of the night sky, whose qualities—remote depth of color, refraction of space, dark air and white light—similarly combined science, imagination and emotional expressiveness. He explored these concerns in the "Nebula Paintings," a series of celestial landscapes employing acrylics, spray paint and mixed media that he has continued to produce into the 2020s. His earlier Nebula paintings combined colorful gestural and atmospherics with a careful use of pointed terms that reflected the context of their making; for example, the painting ''In Space'' (1980) bears ghostly text reading "race" and "complexion constellation." Critics have described his later "Nebula" works as more vibrant and hypnotic works that "conflate the properties of post-Impressionism and actionist Ab Ex, the emotional allegory of literally nebulous abstraction, and the cosmic bent of space-travel science" (e.g., ''Flaming Star Nebula #1'', 2017; ''Red Yellow Black White and Burnt Sienna'', 2020). In the 1990s, Ray created assemblage-paintings that probed issues of identity, racial justice and inclusion through a fluid use of imagery—as symbols and formal elements—that subverted negative stereotypes and racial epithets. One year after the Los Angeles riots sparked by the Rodney King police brutality case and acquittal, he completed a series including the works ''US'' and ''Blue Spade'' (both 1993); the former work's title refers to both the United States and the contradictions of the pronoun "us," which can function inclusively or divisively, as in "us vs. them." The series juxtaposed symbols of freedom and equality and repression and protest: a gazelle mask symbolizing the African continent; kente cloth, a Ghanaian textile with significance to the West African diaspora that he used in place of an American flag's traditional blue field; flowers seemingly growing out of concrete; splashes of black paint suggesting stained urban sidewalks, anger or Abstract Expressionism; a whip painted white, a blood-red cross, and spade forms evoking a racial slur, card games and a tool. In 2014, the series was presented at Prospect.3 in New Orleans, in the aftermath of the Michael Brown shooting; In a ''The New Orleans Times-Picayune'' review, Doug McCash wrote, "Encountering Ray's paintings and reading their backstory in the fall of 2014 was a chilling experience that emphasized art's power to mark a moment ... or moments."


References


External links


Joe Ray
Diane Rosenstein Gallery
Joe Ray
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Collections {{DEFAULTSORT:Ray, Joe 20th-century American sculptors 21st-century American sculptors 20th-century American painters 21st-century American painters African-American artists Artists from Los Angeles California Institute of the Arts alumni 1944 births Living people