
In a thought-provoking statement, David Hammons once remarked, “outrageously magical things happen when you mess around with a symbol.” For the last half a century, Hammons has been busy creating a vocabulary of symbols based on everyday life, and tinkering with them through the medium of prints, drawings, performances, videos, sculptures made from found objects, and paintings. The results of his explorations have been nothing short of astounding, and each one has possessed a unique kind of enchantment, achieved through the metamorphosis of commonplace objects into allegories depicting the outsider’s experience in today’s world, be it an artist, a foreigner, a madman, or most persistently, a person of color.
Born in 1943 in Springfield, Illinois, Hammons moved to Los Angeles in 1963 to pursue an education in art. He attended Los Angeles City College and the Los Angeles Trade and Technical College before enrolling in night classes at Otis Art Institute, under the guidance of renowned realist artist and activist, Charles White. Even though he completed his art education at Chouinard Art Institute in 1968, Hammons always held a deep admiration for White’s work and the way he approached his art.
While he did not choose to work in a conventional realistic style, Hammons translated White’s socially conscious, hand-drawn realism into a contemporary form of realism, using found objects and materials. Starting from the late 1960s, he began incorporating his own body into his artwork, greasing it, pressing it onto paper, and sprinkling it with pigment and graphite to create what he called “Body Prints.” These figures resembled X-rays and were adorned with intricate details of skin, hair, clothing, and body parts achieved through the process of one-to-one transfer.
Upon his relocation to New York in 1974, Hammons embarked on a lifelong journey of crafting sculptures from the rich remnants of urban African American life. These included hair collected from barbershop floors, chicken bones, bottle caps, and empty liquor bottles. His public installations, like Higher Goals (1983; 1986) – a collection of towering basketball hoops adorned with metal bottle caps cleverly shaped to resemble cowrie shells, and In the Hood (1993) – a small sculpture made from a hood cut from a used sweatshirt and mounted on the wall like an African mask, have become iconic pieces of American Conceptual art. However, beyond their artistic value, they serve as poignant critiques of the stereotypes and struggles associated with growing up as an African American in the United States. These range from the often unattainable dream of becoming a sports hero, to the constant threat faced when simply wearing everyday attire perceived as threatening.
From his groundbreaking act of selling snowballs of various sizes on a New York City sidewalk in Bliz-aard Ball Sale (1983), to his recent paintings, where the surface is concealed by tarpaulins, burlap, or old furniture, such as Untitled, Hammons’ work has sparked an ongoing discourse surrounding the role of the artist and the significance of art outside the luxurious confines of a museum or gallery. Resistant to exhibiting his own work, Hammons maintains his position as a cultural outlier, while continuously creating pieces that solidify his status as one of the most relevant and influential contemporary American artists.
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