First Friday October: Chakaia Booker
UT Gallery Downtown
October 5th from 5-9pm
Sculptor
Chakaia Booker fuses ecological concerns with explorations of racial and
economic difference, globalization, and gender by recycling discarded tires
into complex assemblages.
Booker began to integrate discarded construction
materials into large, outdoor sculptures in the early 1990s. Tires resonate
with her for their versatility and rich range of historical and cultural
associations. Booker slices, twists, weaves, and rivets this medium into
radically new forms and textures, which easily withstand outdoor environments.
For her, the varied tones of the rubber
parallels human diversity, while the tire treads suggest images as varied as
African scarification and textile designs. The visible wear and tear on the
tires evokes the physical marks of human aging. Equally, Booker’s use of
discarded tires references industrialization, consumer culture, and
environmental concerns.
Booker’s artistic process is enormously
physical, from transporting the tires to reshaping them with machinery. Though
she has adopted utilitarian jeans and work boots in her studio, she always
wears a large, intricately wrapped headdress, which has links to her earliest
wearable art and has become her fashion signature.
Booker received a B.A. in sociology from Rutgers
University in 1976, and an M.F.A. from the City College of New York in 1993.
She gained international acclaim at the 2000 Whitney Biennial with It’s So Hard
to Be Green (2000), her 12.5 x 21 foot wall-hung tire sculpture. Booker
received the Pollock-Krasner Grant in 2002 and a Guggenheim Fellowship in 2005.
She has exhibited in group and solo exhibitions nationally and internationally.