Tajh Rust: Passages Opens at Fridman Gallery

 

 

 

Tajh Rust ~ Idowu. Image courtesy Fridman Gallery

Fridman Gallery will open its doors to Passages, the first solo exhibition by Brooklyn-born artist, Tajh Rust. The artists new paintings, a meditation on the lasting impression of transitions, trace the passage of time, of bodies through space, and of ideas through text.

Through figuration and abstraction, Rust explores the relationship between black identity and space. He collaborates with his subjects to determine how they are represented and employs film and literary references to draw connections among portraiture, language, and modes of representation.

Tajh Rust ~ Passages. Image courtesy Fridman Gallery

Central to Rust’s practice is his mastery of color, with which he creates vivid environments echoing the subjects’ skin tones. Individuals are at once obscured and placed center-stage, challenging the historical invisibility of black bodies. Referencing the perspectival distortions more typically employed in film and photography, Rust’s paintings command the gaze of the viewer toward the intimacy of each scene.

Tajh Rust ~ Sunrise. Image courtesy Fridman Gallery

Born in Brooklyn, Tajh Rust is currently based between New York and New Haven. Rust graduated from The Cooper Union in 2011 with a BFA in Painting and Film. He is currently an MFA candidate at Yale University School of Art. His works have been shown at various venues, including the New York Immigrant Coalition (2017), the Museum of Contemporary African Diasporan Arts (2017), Untitled Miami Beach (2018), and the August Wilson African American Cultural Center (2018).

Coinciding with Tajh Rust’s exhibition, improv composer and bassist Brandon Lopez will join Gerald Cleaver (drums) and Steve Baczkowski (saxophone) for a performance in the gallery on Wednesday, June 19 at 8pm.  Purchase Tickets. (Tickets $15; Students $10 use code student19 at checkout).

The Lopez Trio, Wednesday, June 19th. Image courtesy Fridman Gallery.

Tajh Rust: Passages will be on view from May 22 to June 21, 2019 at Fridman Gallery, 169 Bowery, SE corner of Delancey Street, NYC