Slater Bradley
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Slater Bradley (born 1975 in San Francisco, California) is a conceptual and cross-disciplinary artist, typically working in thematic series and installations. In his video works, Bradley often combines footage of real events, soundtracks drawn from classical and contemporary music as well as references to literary, scientific, or historical works. In his most recent work, Bradley manipulates photographic material by using markers and eliminating backgrounds as well as removing known icons from their time and place. Bradley was dubbed the "unintended king of serendipity" by curator Heidi Zuckerman as well as “something of a cult hero” by Anne Stringfield of The New Yorker. He has exhibited collaborative work with Ed Lachman at the Aspen Art Museum and the
Whitney Museum of American Art The Whitney Museum of American Art, known informally as "The Whitney", is an art museum in the Meatpacking District and West Village neighborhoods of Manhattan in New York City. It was founded in 1930 by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (1875–194 ...
. In 2005, at the age of 30, Bradley became the youngest artist to have a solo show at
The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, often referred to as The Guggenheim, is an art museum at 1071 Fifth Avenue on the corner of East 89th Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in New York City. It is the permanent home of a continuously exp ...
in New York.   He currently lives and works in Berlin, Germany.


Early life and education

Slater Bradley was born and raised in San Francisco, California. He graduated from
San Francisco University High School San Francisco University High School is a private college preparatory high school located in San Francisco, California. The school was opened in 1975. Facilities and campus The school is made up of four buildings, commonly referred to as Upper, ...
in 1993 and earned a B.A. from the
University of California, Los Angeles The University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) is a public land-grant research university in Los Angeles, California. UCLA's academic roots were established in 1881 as a teachers college then known as the southern branch of the California S ...
in 1998, where he received the Lillian Levenson Scholarship.


Early career

Bradley launched his career with his first solo show titled ''The Fried Liver Attack'', named after the chess gambit which sacrifices the knight, at
Team Gallery Team Gallery is a contemporary art gallery located in the SoHo neighborhood of New York City, with an additional project space in Venice, Los Angeles, California. It was founded by José Freire and Lisa Ruyter in 1996. Team has represented such ...
in 2000. He gained notoriety at 25 with his second solo show ''Charlatan,'' also at
Team Gallery Team Gallery is a contemporary art gallery located in the SoHo neighborhood of New York City, with an additional project space in Venice, Los Angeles, California. It was founded by José Freire and Lisa Ruyter in 1996. Team has represented such ...
, which displayed his "real flair for capturing emotional moments". The show featured the video work ''The Laurel Tree (Beach)'' (2000) with actress Chloë Sevigny standing on a cloudy beach reciting
Thomas Mann Paul Thomas Mann ( , ; ; 6 June 1875 – 12 August 1955) was a German novelist, short story writer, social critic, philanthropist, essayist, and the 1929 Nobel Prize in Literature laureate. His highly symbolic and ironic epic novels and novell ...
's
Tonio Kröger ''Tonio Kröger'' () is a novella by Thomas Mann, written early in 1901, when he was 25. It was first published in 1903. A. A. Knopf in New York published the first American edition in 1936, translated by Helen Tracy Lowe-Porter. Plot summary T ...
(1903). Sevigny's “uninflected manner” is particularly pared down as the speech she delivers happens to be incredibly loaded, as described in a review by Frieze Magazine:
''For, after all, what more pitiable sight is there than life led astray by art? We artists have a consummate contempt for the dilettante, the man who is leading a living life and yet thinks he can be an artist too if he gets half the chance.''
The show also featured the works ''Female Gargoyle''. and ''JFK Jr''. The first being an “amateur video” of a tattooed woman balancing dangerously on the corner of a roof. Here, ''“''a female gargoyle come to life, who, it seems, is engulfed by a life-and-death decision”, but the work never reveals the fate of the gargoyle. In ''JFK Jr.'', Slater Bradley reflects on “the culture of loss and remembrance”. The video follows a young girl placing a flower at a memorial outside of the deceased’s apartment, and ''“''the camera’s myopic gaze seems to comment on the mythological, almost narcissistic grief we are willing to shed for those we never knew”. By 2004, Slater Bradley was considered a "rising younger artist", having held a solo exhibition in 2003 at the Center for Curatorial Studies Museum at
Bard College Bard College is a private liberal arts college in Annandale-on-Hudson, New York. The campus overlooks the Hudson River and Catskill Mountains, and is within the Hudson River Historic District—a National Historic Landmark. Founded in 1860, ...
and being included in the 2004
Whitney Biennial The Whitney Biennial is a biennial exhibition of contemporary American art, typically by young and lesser known artists, on display at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City, United States. The event began as an annual exhibition ...
with the video ''Theory and Observation'' which critic Jerry Saltz described as one of "the most ravishing works in the show". The video contemplates the relationship between reason and faith and features close-ups of a youth choir in the cathedral of Notre-Dame. The work “stunningly capture states of gawkiness and anxiety in kids whose singing channels divinity” as described by the art critic
Peter Schjeldahl Peter Charles Schjeldahl (; March 20, 1942 – October 21, 2022) was an American art critic, poet, and educator. He was noted for being the head art critic at ''The New Yorker'', having earlier written for ''The Village Voice'', ''ARTnews'', and ...
in The New Yorker' In 2005, Bradley was awarded by the NASA Art Program, and produced the video work ''Dark Night of the Soul'' (2005-2006) in collaboration with the American Museum of Natural History. The work portrays an astronaut walking through the galleries of the American Museum of Natural History in New York to the re-recording of Beethoven’s “Moonlight Sonata”, performed on a flute. The lone character explores representations of Earth and outer space as if visiting a strange new world. “Alluding to images of science and history, as well as an already past future referenced in Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, Bradley’s film evokes unspoken connections between imagination and fact.”


The Doppelganger

It was at the ''Charlatan'' show, Slater Bradley introduced the concept of “The Doppelganger” – as in ‘one who goes twice’ – with his photographic work ''My Doppelganger as Ian Curtis in a Charlatan Pose (Cigarette)'' as the postcard for the show.' Here, Bradley began passing off photographs of his double, portrayed by model Benjamin Brock (who bears an uncanny resemblance to Bradley himself), as though they were images of himself.' In a review of ''Charlatan'', critic
Roberta Smith Roberta Smith (born 1948) is co-chief art critic of ''The New York Times'' and a lecturer on contemporary art. She is the first woman to hold that position. Early life Born in 1948 in New York City and raised in Lawrence, Kansas. Smith studied a ...
offers the statement ''"''It is a declaration of artistic intent that makes one eager to see what Mr. Bradley will do next." Later, in 2001, during the show ''Trompe le Monde'' at Galerie Yvon Lambert in Paris, Bradley reintroduced the concept in a video installation featuring “Slater” waking up in his apartment and walking out into New York City. The seminal concept of The Doppelganger continued to be woven into Bradley's work in the following years.' In 2002, during the show ''Here are the Young Men'' at
Team Gallery Team Gallery is a contemporary art gallery located in the SoHo neighborhood of New York City, with an additional project space in Venice, Los Angeles, California. It was founded by José Freire and Lisa Ruyter in 1996. Team has represented such ...
, Bradley presented the work ''Factory Archives'' (2002)'','' which would later become the first of three videos in the acclaimed ''Doppelganger Trilogy'' (also including ''Phantom Release'' (2003) and ''Recorded Yesterday'' (2004)).' The trilogy revolves around the subject of "recycled illusions that are the reality of pop culture"' and conjures up three pop icons,
Ian Curtis Ian Kevin Curtis (15 July 1956 – 18 May 1980) was an English musician, singer, and songwriter. He was best known as the lead singer, guitarist, and lyricist of the post-punk band Joy Division, with whom he released the albums ''Unknown P ...
, Kurt Cobain and
Michael Jackson Michael Joseph Jackson (August 29, 1958 – June 25, 2009) was an American singer, songwriter, dancer, and philanthropist. Dubbed the "King of Pop", he is regarded as one of the most significant cultural figures of the 20th century. Over a ...
, described by
Nancy Spector Nancy Spector is an American museum curator who has held positions at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York City and the Brooklyn Museum. Education Spector graduated with a B.A. in Philosophy from Sarah Lawrence College in 1981. She rece ...
, curator of Contemporary Art at
the Guggenheim The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, often referred to as The Guggenheim, is an art museum at 1071 Fifth Avenue on the corner of East 89th Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in New York City. It is the permanent home of a continuously exp ...
, as “fallen heroes”. Spector continues: “two by suicide and one by a protracted descent into disrepute—these figures are perceived through the distancing lens of desire and memory.” Slater Bradley explicitly situates his work in the context of the fandom surrounding these three fallen heroes, which he summons from the dead. Bradley describes Ian Curtis – the subject/ object of ''Factory Archives'' (2002) – as a “cult hero” and explains how: “ he Nirvana videoPhantom Release links itself directly to the fans,” bringing together “images and performances culled and homogenized from my memories of MTV, concert documentaries, magazine covers, Saturday Night Live, and three concerts I had seen in San Francisco”; and says, of Michael Jackson, who is represented in Recorded Yesterday (2004): “He was my first introduction into the realm of the rock star and with it, the worship factor." Each chapter of the trilogy appears both worn and overexposed, as if distorted by age, or, as described by Paul Fleming in his essay from the Lifetime Achievement Award, “As if secretly documenting a sliver of time, the images have a home video quality: wobbly, slightly out-of-focus (…) like a memory slipping away.”  The three video works featured recordings of a faux concert performances, such as in ''Factory Archives'' (2002), where Curtis, lead singer of the punk band
Joy Division Joy Division were an English rock band formed in Salford in 1976. The group consisted of vocalist Ian Curtis, guitarist/keyboardist Bernard Sumner, bassist Peter Hook and drummer Stephen Morris. Sumner and Hook formed the band after atte ...
, is depicted as an elusive performer just before the dawn of MTV. It is unclear, who is the doppelganger in Bradley’s trilogy: “Benjamin Brock is neither simply playing Slater Bradley nor is he merely assuming the role of these cultural icons. Rather, Brock plays Bradley playing each of these modern mythological figures populating our media saturated collective unconsciousness”. With this, “Bradley transforms the doppelganger into a tripleganger”. The images themselves are familiar when Bradley, through Brock, produces new recordings or even a second history. However, the recordings never feature Bradley himself, but his double – and always at a distance. “One never sees Bradley, one never sees Curtis, Cobain, or Jackson. There is only Brock, who is all of them and none of them.” In 2004, Bradley showed at the
Museum of Modern Art The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) is an art museum located in Midtown Manhattan, New York City, on 53rd Street between Fifth and Sixth Avenues. It plays a major role in developing and collecting modern art, and is often identified as one of ...
's ''Premieres'' and exhibited the ''Doppelganger Trilogy'' at the Los Angeles gallery
Blum & Poe Blum & Poe is a contemporary art gallery located in Los Angeles, New York, and Tokyo. Development Blum & Poe was founded by Tim Blum and Jeff Poe in Santa Monica, California, in September 1994. The inaugural exhibition in Santa Monica feature ...
. In 2005, the trilogy was shown by
the Guggenheim The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, often referred to as The Guggenheim, is an art museum at 1071 Fifth Avenue on the corner of East 89th Street on the Upper East Side of Manhattan in New York City. It is the permanent home of a continuously exp ...
under the title ''Recent Acquisitions: Slater Bradley's Doppelganger Trilogy''. The same year, the work ''The Year of the Doppelganger'' was shown at the
Berkeley Art Museum The Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive (BAMPFA, formerly abbreviated as BAM/PFA) are a combined art museum, repertory movie theater, and archive associated with the University of California, Berkeley. Lawrence Rinder was Director from ...
, organized by BAM/PFA and curated by Heidi Zuckerman.' The video installations blend the widely recognizable drumbeat from
Led Zeppelin Led Zeppelin were an English rock band formed in London in 1968. The group comprised vocalist Robert Plant, guitarist Jimmy Page, bassist/keyboardist John Paul Jones, and drummer John Bonham. With a heavy, guitar-driven sound, they are ci ...
“When The Levee Braks”, performed by Bradley’s doppelganger, with a surprise appearance by the Cal football team, entering the stadium to practice.' Zuckerman writes: "By replacing himself with another, Bradley highlights the fallacy of individuality and underscores his own mortality. Like many artists of his generation (he is thirty), Bradley exhibits a fascination with death in much of his work. ... With an uncanny ability to channel moments loaded with cultural relevance, equipped only with a video camera, Slater Bradley becomes a clairvoyant for collective consciousness.''”'' ‘The Year of the Doppelganger’ was also shown at Barbara Gladstone Gallery as part of the group show "Bridge Freezes Before Road" (June 24 – August 6, 2005), which was featured in the art review "Fanciful to Figurative to Wryly Inscrutable," by Holland Cotter, as well as on the front page of the New York Times' arts section.' The work was acquired by MoMA and is part of the museum’s collection. The theme of pop culture was continually referenced throughout Bradley's work until The Doppelganger's symbolic death in the 3-channel film ''Dead Ringer'' (2011), a groundbreaking collaboration between Bradley and noted cinematographer
Ed Lachman Edward Lachman (born March 31, 1948) is an American cinematographer and director. Lachman is mostly associated with the American independent film movement, and has served as director of photography on films by Todd Haynes (including '' Far from ...
.


Collaboration with Ed Lachman

In 2010, Bradley held an exhibition at the
Whitney Museum The Whitney Museum of American Art, known informally as "The Whitney", is an art museum in the Meatpacking District and West Village neighborhoods of Manhattan in New York City. It was founded in 1930 by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (1875–194 ...
in collaboration with Academy Award nominated cinematographer
Edward Lachman Edward Lachman (born March 31, 1948) is an American cinematographer and director. Lachman is mostly associated with the American independent film movement, and has served as director of photography on films by Todd Haynes (including '' Far from ...
, whose best known films include ''Far from Heaven, Erin Brockovich,'' and ''The Virgin Suicides.'' Lachman was director of photography for the 1993 film ''Dark Blood,'' starring
River Phoenix River Jude Phoenix (; August 23, 1970 – October 31, 1993) was an American actor, musician and activist. Phoenix grew up in an itinerant family, as the older brother of Rain Phoenix, Joaquin Phoenix, Liberty Phoenix, and Summer Phoenix. He ...
, and which was still in production at the time of the actor’s sudden death. ''“Bradley, whose photographs and films explore celebrity and the fractured nature of identity, worked with Lachman to create two video installations and a series of photographs referencing Dark Blood, derived from Lachman’s memories of filming the original work and combined with Bradley’s complex identification with the late actor as both subject and symbol.”'' The video installation ''Shadow'' featured the Doppelganger as
River Phoenix River Jude Phoenix (; August 23, 1970 – October 31, 1993) was an American actor, musician and activist. Phoenix grew up in an itinerant family, as the older brother of Rain Phoenix, Joaquin Phoenix, Liberty Phoenix, and Summer Phoenix. He ...
and served as a prologue to the unfinished Hollywood film. In ''Dark Blood'', River Phoenix plays a young, half–Navajo widower who lives like a hermit near a nuclear testing site in the Nevada desert, waiting for the apocalypse. A married couple strands when their car breaks down in the desert, but are rescued by the widower, who falls in love with the woman. The film progresses to a dramatic ending. However, the final scenes were never filmed. Filmed seventeen years later in the same location, ''Shadow'' features the imagined past of the main character, combining images from the original film with new footage. Artists have long engaged with the mythology of Hollywood, “creating a hybrid of art and cinema that has become an important strand of contemporary art”. Based on Ed Lachman’s memories and recollections of filming ''Dark Blood'', Slater Bradley imagines the widower’s life before meeting the couple. The two narratives are woven together by threads of fact and fiction whose boundaries are never made clear” as put by the curators of the exhibition at the
Whitney Museum The Whitney Museum of American Art, known informally as "The Whitney", is an art museum in the Meatpacking District and West Village neighborhoods of Manhattan in New York City. It was founded in 1930 by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (1875–194 ...
. In a further twist, Ben Brock, who plays Phoenix as the widower and previously portrayed “The Doppelganger”, makes the installation a triple portrait of the actor, the cinematographer, and the artist, blurring the lines between illusion and reality, past and future.


After the Doppelganger

A theme of the "lost woman," an idea sourced chiefly from Chris Marker's film
La Jetée ''La Jetée'' () is a 1962 French science fiction featurette directed by Chris Marker and associated with the Left Bank artistic movement. Constructed almost entirely from still photos, it tells the story of a post-nuclear war experiment in tim ...
, became central to Bradley’s work after the completion of ''Shadow''. Following Marker's death on July 29, 2012, Bradley began work on what would become his homage to the 1962 sci-fi masterpiece. His video, entitled ''she was my la jetée'' premiered o
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on April 5, 2013 and was shown soon after in an eponymous exhibition at Galería Helga de Alvear in Madrid, Spain as well as part of ''Sequoia: Recent Work by Slater Bradley'' at Cornell University's Johnson Museum of Art. The elusive female subject continued to haunt Bradley over the course of a solo show with Sean Kelly gallery during which the artist completed his work in a small bunker of the gallery’s basement. The exhibition ''A Point Beyond the Tree'' whose title was taken from a line in Marker’s film, opened on December 14, 2013 alongside ''Saints and Sinners'', a selection of Robert Mapplethorpe’s portraits celebrating the 25th anniversary of his counterculturally groundbreaking exhibition ''Robert Mapplethorpe: The Perfect Moment''. In a parallel investigation, Bradley was at work on a lifelike copper casting of his high school baseball glove, revisiting the Salingerian themes found in his 2009–2011 video, ''don't let me disappear''. Surprisingly, the copper sculpture, ''Cancer Rising'', was completed just as
Shane Salerno Shane Salerno (born November 27, 1972) is an American screenwriter, producer, and Chief Creative Officer of The Story Factory. His writing credits include the films '' Avatar: The Way of Water'', ''Armageddon'', '' Savages,'' '' Shaft'', and the ...
's documentary Salinger was released in the U.S., and just prior to the peculiar leak of three unpublished Salinger stories. The first of these, "The Ocean Full of Bowling Balls" brings to life a familiar character from
Catcher in the Rye ''The Catcher in the Rye'' is an American novel by J. D. Salinger that was partially published in serial form from 1945–46 before being novelized in 1951. Originally intended for adults, it is often read by adolescents for its themes of angst ...
, a boy in the habit of inscribing verses of poetry, selections from
William Blake William Blake (28 November 1757 – 12 August 1827) was an English poet, painter, and printmaker. Largely unrecognised during his life, Blake is now considered a seminal figure in the history of the poetry and visual art of the Romantic Age. ...
, John Keats and Robert Browning, across his firstbaseman's glove.


Disappearing from New York to Berlin

In the ultimate disappearing act, Bradley departed New York for Berlin in 2013. Once there, Bradley returned to spiritual themes and questions, previously explored in works such as ''Theory and Observation'', which contemplates the relationship between reason and faith, and Bradley began to re-invent himself through rigorous spiritual introspection. Moving from pop cultural icons and references, towards a more abstract and energy-aware artistic approach, this development in Slater Bradley’s work was – as described by Heidi Zuckerman – driven by the artist’s intuition.'To share the learnings from his encounters with transcendence, Bradley co-founded a project space with Johannes Fricke Waldhausen in Munich called Goodroom where he exhibited and offered natal chart readings in December 2015. His work was curated into the group exhibition ''Dreaming Mirrors Dreaming Screens'' at Sprüth Magers gallery in 2016 with thirteen other artists including Jon Rafman,
Andy Hope 1930 Andy Hope 1930 (born Andreas Hofer) is a German artist. Since 1998, most of his work has been signed "Andy Hope 1930" (although at that time the artist was still named Andreas Hofer).Barbara Fischer, ''Universum - Multiversum, Künstler Kritische ...
and
Lizzie Fitch Lizzie Fitch (born 1981) is an American artist who works in the mediums of sculpture, video, performance, and installation art. She graduated from Rhode Island School of Design in 2004. Her long-term collaborator is Ryan Trecartin; their videos, ...
/
Ryan Trecartin Ryan Trecartin (born 1981) is an American artist and filmmaker currently based in Athens, Ohio. He studied at the Rhode Island School of Design, graduating with a BFA in 2004. Trecartin has since lived and worked in New Orleans, Los Angeles, Ph ...
. The show considered the increasingly complex human relationship with screens, objects that have evolved to function as dual representations of both “the rational and the dreamlike.” ''True Faith'', an exhibition curated by
Matthew Higgs Matthew Higgs (born 1964) is an English artist, curator, writer and publisher. His contribution to UK contemporary art has included the creation of ''Imprint 93'', a series of artists’ editions featuring the work of artists such as Martin Creed ...
and Jon Savage with the collaboration of archivist Johan Kugelberg in Manchester, England, was part of a 2017 city-wide arts festival commissioned to celebrate the music of Joy Division and explore their continuing cultural impact as a powerful inspiration to visual artists. Bradley’s photograph ''Factory Icon'' from 2000, portraying the artist’s doppelganger as Ian Curtis, was re-worked in the proportions of the golden rectangle and featured on the cover of the exhibition catalogue as well as displayed on banners hung throughout the city. Also on view was a video from Bradley's Doppelganger Trilogy from 2001–2004. As noted by Adrian Seattle writing for The Guardian, "in this work, it is not Ian Curtis on stage at all, but a double (Bradley’s other Doppelganger video portraits portray Kurt Cobain and Michael Jackson). The harder you look, the more difficult it is to grasp the image. The singer is only a trace: pinwheeling arms, a jerky back-and-forth shuffle, a looming face that comes and goes, that sonorous baritone voice, a thing more solid and permanent than this fleeting figure."


Sundoor

By shifting the focus towards the spiritual dimensions, rather than channeling pop icons, the inner focus becomes apparent in Bradley’s more recent work, such as the ''Shields'' series, where ancient cosmology and astrological themes play a significant role.' The ''Shield'' series consists of hundreds of thousands of paint-pen strokes that create both subtle graduations and patterns. The experience of the works, as well as the process behind, calls upon hypnotic or even meditative concentration, and reminds the viewer of both organic tissue and radiant halos of cosmic dust.' In the artists’ most recent installation works, the collective spiritual experience and sacred sites are explored through transcultural cosmology, philosophy, and mythology. His work includes several recurring forms and figures, such as the pentagram as a symbol of Venus and divine femininity, crystal stones and the oculus, the portal to the divine, as well as an ancient color palette of deep blue and gold, which throughout history has been connected to transcendence and the divine across belief systems. In 2017, Zuecca Projects presented ''Sundoor at World’s End'', featuring Bradley’s sculpture ''Crystal Labyrinth (La Maddalena)'' in Venice, Italy in 2017, concurrent with the 57th Biennale. The installation, consisting of 888 rose quartz crystals forming a 7-meter diameter labyrinth and surrounded by solar shields, was installed from May through November at :it:Chiesa della Maddalena (Venezia) (Church of Mary Magdalene) and was accompanied by a soundtrack by composer
Dustin O’Halloran Dustin O'Halloran (born September 8, 1971) is an American composer and pianist. Aside from releasing music as a recording artist, O'Halloran is a film and TV composer, as well as one half of ambient act A Winged Victory for the Sullen. Early l ...
. It is a mystical work about spiritual ascension, and in the words of
John Major Jenkins John Major Jenkins (4 March 1964 – 2 July 2017) was an American author and pseudoscientific researcher. He is best known for his works that theorize certain astronomical and esoteric connections of the calendar systems used by the Maya civiliza ...
, the "journey up through the planetary spheres of the ecliptic to the door of the Most High, the Sol Invictus, the Eighth Gate, the realm of the Hypercosmic Sun." ''Sundoor at World’s End'' was nominated for a Global Fine Art Award for Best Public Exhibition. ''Slater Bradley: Sundoor'' a monograph featuring texts by both John Major Jenkins and Rachel Baum was released in December 2018 by Kerber Verlag. The publication considers his international installation work dealing with collective spiritual experience, sacred sites, and personal histories. Bradley describes in an interview with
Artsy Artsy, formally known as Art.sy Inc is a New York City based online art brokerage. Its main business is developing and hosting website for numerous galleries as well as selling art for them. It utilizes a search engine and database to draw conn ...
how he thinks “there’s a neo-spiritual art movement happening.” He says: “At a certain point the truth is a bigger subject than pop culture. With meditation you find your inner peace, your inner truth, your centered truth, and then you find the world, and the world finds its center. That’s a noble pursuit for art these days.” The book launched as part of the exhibition ''Under the Sunbeams'' opening at therethere gallery in Los Angeles in February 2019. Bradley exhibited his series of ''D8S'' paintings which play off the geometrics of astrological charts from chosen moments in time inspired by birthdates, founding fathers, origin stories pulled from the past and future.


The Gates of Many Colors

Slater Bradley’s recent body of work, ''The Gates of Many Colors,'' sees the artist (The Artist) adopting the role of a diviner. But “can The Artist, as an archetype, connect our secular contemporary realities to a more transcendental awareness that incorporates our ancient wisdoms, systems, and even prophecies?” In eight digital photographs transferred onto two-meter-high canvases, the gates of Jerusalem’s Old City Wall are depicted as monumental edifices with visible everyday features like parked cars and graffiti. However, the photographs have also been altered with the gate portal appearing as another color. The Gates are portals to a holy place according to all three of the world’s major monotheistic religions, and the colors applied to Bradley’s representations of them hope to activate a new kind of awareness in viewer: “Humanity is where we are because the Golden Gate is blocked,” Slater Bradley claims. “Our access to the spiritual worlds has been blocked by materialist pursuits”. The Gates of Many Colors was scheduled to open at Galería Pelaires, but post-poned and later shut down due to COVID-19.


References


Collections


Whitney Museum of American Art

Colección Jumex

Museum of Modern Art

Solomon R. Guggenheim Foundation

Frans Hals Museum

Fundación Helga de Alvear


Publications

* ''Slater Bradley: Sundoor'', Text by Rachel Baum, Slater Bradley, John Major Jenkins, Kerber Verlag, 2018. * ''Look Up and Stay in Touch'', Texts by Chrissie Iles, Mark Rappolt, Interview with Ed Lachman and Heidi Zuckerman Jacobson, Aspen Art Press, 2012. * ''Lifetime Achievement Award'', Texts by Matthew Mascotte and Paul Fleming, Savannah College of Art And Design, 2007. * ''don’t let me disappear'', Text by Amada Cruz, Center for Curatorial Studies, Bard College, 2002.


External links


Slater Bradley

Whitney Museum: ''Slater Bradley and Ed Lachman: Shadow"

Manchester International Festival: True Faith
{{DEFAULTSORT:Bradley, Slater Living people University of California, Los Angeles alumni American photographers 1975 births Artists from San Francisco Artists from Brooklyn