On High by Paula Wilson
Locust Projects, Miami, FL
November 21, 2020 – January 23, 2021
“Looking at this work now, in the current moment, it feels aspirational, linking past and the present, ushering in the potentials of the future.” – Paula Wilson
On High at Locust Projects features Paula Wilson’s 2017 video Living Monument, a one-minute, two-channel video. On one screen is footage compiled from online sources of the confederate General Beauregard Equestrian Statue’s removal in New Orleans in April of 2017. On the second, is video of a covert performance by the artist, in which she dances at dawn atop the plinth before she was forced to leave the premises by law enforcement. Inspired by the vibrant jazz funeral tradition of Second-Line Parades in New Orleans, Wilson uses the empty base as a pedestal to be acted upon—celebrating, in a hand-painted costume, the creative forces required for transformation. The tunic the artist created and is wearing in the video is also featured in the exhibition.
In the wake of Black Lives Matter protests this summer sparked by the murder of George Floyd, there has been a renewed focus on symbols of white supremacy embodied in the Confederacy and a demand for their removal. The debate over Confederate symbols is not new. In 2015, after the mass shooting at the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in South Carolina, the Confederate battle flag was removed from the State House after more than 50 years. Other cities started considering taking down Civil War and colonialist monuments from public grounds, including New Orleans, which removed four in April 2017. A few months later in Charlottesville, the violence during the Unite the Right rally would be the catalyst for the removal of dozens of monuments across the country. Now, some three years later, the urgency of the current moment brings Wilson’s Living Monument forward for reflection. The artist’s pre-dawn performance is hypnotic, ritual-like, seemingly coming from “on high,” linking past and present, ushering in the potentials of the future. Wilson highlights black joy, moving us away from static effigies of Western power, demanding a creative and triumphant orientation to the now.
The performance was shot by filmmaker Vashni Korin with a powerful soundtrack, “Speaking in My Native Tongue” by Jamel Henderson.
Also featured is the video Salty & Fresh from 2014 accessed via a QR code as a nod to the act of looking through screens, which are ubiquitous as it is, but have predominated our lives since the start of the pandemic. Screens, cell phones, windows—the things we look at or experience things through, including each other—have been an ongoing theme in the artist’s work. Here and now, it serves to remind us of the elusiveness and intangibility of the virtual experience versus IRL, but also the intangibility of capturing the essence of something wonderous, such as art and the creative act.
Made on Miami’s historic Virginia Key Beach, in 2014, Salty & Fresh playfully takes on Western art historical tropes and patriarchy with the artist appearing as a massive, towering goddess, rising from the sea draped in a long, turret-like colorfully painted skirt. She uses her giant palette and brush to paint three figures who resemble Grecian clay vases. As the Poseidon-like goddess paints faces onto the three nude derrières, picnickers—in a restaging of Manet’s “Déjeuner sur l’herbe”—observe and try to capture the scene through their cell phone cameras. Sarah Lewis, Associate Professor of History of Art and Architecture and African and African American Studies at Harvard University, describes the encounter, “The beach dwellers saw a colossal painter with brushes and palette fit for a giant emerging from the sea to fill her canvas, the most primeval one of all—our bodies, our very selves. They tried, endlessly, to photograph what they were witnessing—Paula Wilson’s performative painting, Salty & Fresh—just as we do when we come to see the essence of the creative act—we stand mesmerized that it is always around, this fertile, eternal story. Wilson’s piece is a wondrous testament to the central narrative of the artistic process, a declaration that the essential, unbreakable story of the human creative act is one of which we, whether as spectator, creator, participant, are all a part.”