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HAMBONE

October 12th - November 23rd 2024


Opening Reception: October 12th 6-9 pm with a special performance at 7pm

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Cleo the Project Space presents HAMBONE, an exhibition featuring the works of Brandon English, Y. Malik Jalal, and Kare Williams. In the individual practices of these artists, the weight of attendance is held with penitence and celebration. The works in this exhibition form a vocabulary of performance and a grammar of rapture and rupture. In addition to his prolific painting practice, Kare Williams’ interest in Go-Go music led him to Tony, a character from his hometown of Washington, DC. Go-Go is known for its distinctive “pocket” beat and call-and-response interaction with the audience. Go-Go thrives in excess and is not bound by venue or instrument—the pocket is all it needs. 

 

Within an event centered historical tradition, the phenomenological is often abandoned — testimony becomes a restorative act. Each artist assumes the tenuous position of participant, nearing reenactment. Much of the work is time-based, incorporating footage, archives, and performance; these are ongoing, cyclical, and implicating. The political production and reproduction of the image is a shared theme, explored with varying degrees of clarity. The display and exhibition of archival work, as in the practice of Brandon English, are critical. The integrity of the work hinges on how, or even whether, it is publicly viewed. In many ways, the gallery itself can undermine the work. His work refuses the audience, with partial inclusion or a fully present yet inaccessible, emphasizing the significance of evidence placed in plain view. 

 

While considering English’s and Williams’ approach to performance, Hambone arose. Striking the body to provide percussion, like that of step teams, Hambone refers to Juba, an ecstatic African American dance tradition from the antebellum era with apparent roots in West Africa and inextricable from the American theater, film, and cartoons is the blackface vaudeville Hambone character. And, of course, stewing ham bones to enrich otherwise meatless meals with savory nutrient-dense marrow, a staple in the African American culinary tradition. It is all also relevant to my role in this exhibition, as I have looked to them for aim. The libidinal, as in appetite, the metabolic, and the erotic, not seduction or representation, but rather the subcutaneous is what is at play here — that which breaks the skin. 

 

-Y. Malik Jalal

 

 

Brandon English is an interdisciplinary visual artist interested in counter-surveillance archival practices and how they intersect with vestiges of vernacular image making and the lineages of African American object performance.

 

brandon-english.format.com

 

Kare Williams earned his BFA in painting from Savannah College of Art and Design, Karé has resided in the Savannah area. Exhibiting recently at Echo Contemporary in Atlanta, as well as Gallery 2424, 521 Art Lounge, and a thesis show in Savannah. His work has also been featured in Suboart Magazine in their April issue for emerging artists and numerous private collections throughout the United States such as the Fulton County Public Art Fund.

 

karewilliams.com / @karewillstudio

 

Y. Malik Jalal (b. 1994) is a multidisciplinary artist born in Savannah, GA who currently resides in New Haven, CT. He earned his MFA in Sculpture from Yale University in the Spring of 2024 and has held solo exhibitions at MARCH, New York, NY; Atlanta Contemporary, Atlanta, GA; Alabama Contemporary Art Center, Mobile, AL; and Institute 193, Lexington KY. He has participated in group exhibitions at SHRINE, New York, NY; Swivel Gallery, New York, NY; Et Al Gallery, San Francisco; Murmurs, Los Angeles; Swan Coach Gallery, Atlanta GA; and Jack Barrett, New Y ork City, NY. He participated in the Liste Art Fair in 2024 with Murmurs and curated exhibitions at Alabama Contemporary, Mobile, AL; and Atlanta Contemporary, Atlanta, GA.

 

ymalikjalal.com / @ymalikjalal

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