
Marlon
Forrester, “StTrayvonGeorge23.” From the series “If Black Saints Could
Fly 23: si volare posset nigra XXIII sanctorum” 2021.

Marlon
Forrester, detail “StRaySly23.” From the series “If Black Saints Could
Fly 23: si volare posset nigra XXIII sanctorum” 2021.

Eben Haines, “Humble Servants to the Mystic” 2021.
Now in its ninth year, the biennial James and Audrey Foster Prize Exhibition of the Institute of Contemporary Art/Boston (ICA) showcases local artists of note. The 2021 Foster Prize Exhibition, organized by ICA assistant curator Jeffrey De Blois and on view at the ICA through January 30, 2022, presents new works by Marlon Forrester, Eben Haines and Dell Marie Hamilton. Each transforms existing material — such as a swath of cultural history or a familiar scene — into a vessel of larger and deeper stories.
Born in Guyana, Forrester, 45, is a resident artist in the African American Master Artist Residence Program at Northeastern University. Forrester shows five works from his series, “If Black Saints Could Fly 23: si volare posset nigra XXIII sanctorum” (2021). Its title links this cycle of paintings to the legend of flying Africans, an abiding folktale of the diaspora in which escaped slaves head back to Africa.
Backed by oceanic turquoise filigrees that echo the geometric patterns on basketball courts, Forrester’s paintings portray iconic figures with the minimalist curves of Byzantine and Ethiopian Orthodox statues. His icons venerate those who stand with the marginalized: Jesus, Trinidadian calypso
star Mighty Sparrow, and three figures pairing two men: artist
Jean-Michel Basquiat and President Barack Obama; Trayvon Martin and
George Floyd; and recently deceased elders Ray and Sly, whom the artist
befriended through playing basketball.
Not unlike Forrester, painter and graphic designer Eben Haines, 31, creates works that lend visibility to the unseen.
Since
March 2020, Haines and his partner Delaney Dameron have curated a
pandemic-proof, online exhibition space in their apartment. Their
Shelter in Place Gallery, a miniature 20-by-30-inch structure, has
hosted solo shows for 75 local artists who craft original works to a
1:12-inch scale.
At
the ICA, Haines envelops visitors with a three-room installation,
“Facades” (2021), which mingles past and present and the phantasmal with
the natural. Inviting a long look, its collages, landscape paintings,
portraits and Shaker-style furniture evoke rural New England scenes.
Yet, viewed close up, the familiar scenes become strange. Unexpected
shadows turn what seems like a landscape into theatrical backdrop.
References to art history and the occult abound. See-through candles
float across fields. Shrouded figures hold a séance. Roman busts appear
in portraits. Boxes of memory-laden items resemble those of Joseph
Cornell (1903-1972). Worn, scarred objects are displayed like
sculptures. A stack of wooden slats awaits use.
Multimedia
artist and curator Dell Marie Hamilton, 50, has fashioned an
installation out of belongings she inherited from the renowned art
historian and teacher Susan Decker, who died in 2016. Decker was an
expert in African American art and culture, and the enviable trove on
display includes a wealth of LPs, cassettes, slides, and books spanning
mid-century and contemporary Black writers and artists.
In
“The End of Susan, The End of Everything” (2021), Hamilton displays
Decker’s possessions as they were arranged in her Cambridge apartment.
Among them, Hamilton inserts two videos that inject her own live, Latinx
presence into this collection of a white art historian, as she jousts
with two giants of white modernism. In one, Hamilton’s brown limbs
ripple out from behind a projection of Picasso’s “Les Demoiselles
d’Avignon,” a painting said to be influenced by African mask design. The
other shows a wig-wearing Hamilton delivering Decker’s lecture on
Jackson Pollock and impersonating Pollock as he makes a drip painting.
ON THE WEB
Learn more at www.icaboston.org/exhibitions/2021-james-and-audrey-foster-prize