(top
to bottom) “Saint Mozelle,” 2022. Steel, enamel paint, acrylic paint
and finisher, recycled leather and suede, organic cotton twill and
coated nylon thread; “Homonoia,” 2022. Steel, enamel paint, acrylic
paint and finisher, recycled leather and suede organic cotton twill and
coated nylon thread PHOTOS: MARIS HUTCHINSON. © TAU LEWIS “The Coral Reef Preservation Society,” 2019. Denim, fabric, plaster and seashells. PHOTO: COURTESY THE ARTIST. © TAU LEWIS Honoring the ancestors in every stitch
Towering 10-foot sculptural figures draped in intricate fabric garments dominate the “Tau Lewis: Spirit Level” exhibition, newly opened at the ICA. This is the Jamaican-Canadian artist’s first solo museum exhibition in the United States.
Lewis began sewing with
found materials at age 8 and has a near-photographic memory cataloging
where each key, bead or strip of fabric came from. Many of the items
used in the five figures and the floor-bound quilt displayed in this
exhibition have personal significance to the artist. She refers to the
social, cultural and physical landscapes that she inhabits and collects
objects from as “Black geographies.” The figurative sculptures, which
aesthetically seem to channel different landscapes, from oceanic and
terrestrial to extraterrestrial, may also be the occupiers of these
geographies.
Jeffrey
De Blois, the ICA’s Mannion family curator, says, “Lewis harnesses the
beauty and power carried by found materials in her monumental soft
sculptures. Her sculptures are alive with the energy of previously worn
found fabrics and animated through every meticulous gesture. They are
intensely personal, yet open to a world of associations and meanings.”
The
scale of the figures and their unique hand gestures give a spiritual
air to the soft sculptures. Positioned overlooking the floor quilt, they
feel like Yoruba orishas overlooking the civilization below. From
above, the quilt looks like a beautiful, radiating textile pattern, but
crouching closer to it, viewers can spot objects of all kinds within the
landscape: keys, washers, microchips, a starfish and more.
Lewis’ work joins rich art historical and
Afro-diasporic traditions of upcycling found materials into new worlds.
Her work feels particularly in line with the assemblages of Black
artists Lonnie Holley (a long-time mentor of Lewis) and Thornton Dial,
as well as the quilters of Gee’s Bend, Alabama. Like those famed
quilters, Lewis sews her towering garments by hand, hand-dying muslin
with tea for a richer color and deconstructing everything from
parachutes to leather jackets for material. Giving materials a new life
is a transformative and healing experience; Lewis also uses it an act of
reclaiming agency.
Though
only 30, Lewis has risen quickly in the art world, making strong
connections with artists like Simone Leigh and Holley. Lewis’ work has
been shown in significant group exhibitions like the 2022 Venice
Biennale and the Prospect 5 in New Orleans in 2021.
“Tau
Lewis: Spirit Level” runs at the ICA through January 20, 2025 and will
be accompanied by the artist’s first monograph. Following its Boston
run, the show will travel to the David Zwirner gallery in Los Angeles in
February 2025.
The
lofty sculptures in “Spirit Level” inspire a kind of reverence, for
their scale and intricacy but also out of respect for the past lives
represented in Lewis’s materials. Many hands and memories have traveled
time and space to create this exhibition so that museum-goers can walk
away with something completely new.
ON THE WEB
Learn more at icaboston.org/exhibitions/tau-lewis and taulewis.com