Amber Robles-Gordon: Surely, she (he/we) is a little animal? | Morton Fine Art, Washington D.C.

Lisbeth Thalberg
End the Slave Patrol: Fund All Communities, 2023
Mixed media collage on wood
44 in. x 40 in.
Courtesy of the artist and Morton Fine Art

Washington, D.C. – Morton Fine Art is pleased to present an exhibition of mixed media collage and assemblage on canvas and wooden substrates by Washington D.C.-based interdisciplinary visual artist Amber Robles-Gordon. Continuing a visual conversation originated by Robles-Gordon with Successions: Traversing US Colonialism, her 2021 solo exhibition at American University Museum at the Katzen Center (curated by Larry Ossei-Mensah), Surely, she (he/we) is a little animal? expands the human-focused approach of Successions out towards the universal and the surreal. Who/what is worthy of care? Who cares for the defenseless? Who/what is defended? Incorporating the transdisciplinary study of human ecology into her practice and scope, Robles-Gordon uses the field as an anchor in her expansive investigations of race, history, the sciences and culture. The resulting new body of work rigorously explores colonialism and imperialism, global anti-blackness, child welfare and animal cruelty. Finding them all connected, just not equally, the exhibition exposes frank contradictions in American perceptions of human life, animal life and minority lives.

Ranging across time and species, Robles-Gordon visually connects the histories and developments of the American child protection and animal welfare movements with the Civil Rights and the Black Lives Matter movements and ongoing struggles for freedom—many of which intertwine on themselves as Montgomery Brawl (2023) shows, merging references to the Montgomery Riverfront brawl and Montgomery bus boycott. Consistently interested in questions of access (to citizenship, right, sovereignty), Robles-Gordon now turns her attention to empathy and its (in)accessibility. The artist’s second solo exhibition with the gallery, Surely, she (he/we) is a little animal? will be on view from October 12 to November 9, 2023, at Morton Fine Art’s Washington, D.C. location (52 O St NW #302).

Amber Robles-Gordon
End the Slave Patrol: Fund All Communities, 2023, Mixed media collage on wood. 44 in. x 40 in. Courtesy of the artist and Morton Fine Art

Re-ordered from a statement made concerning the 19th-century child abuse case of Mary Ellen Wilson, which led to the creation of the New York Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, the exhibition title remixes a quote from the period that compared the young Mary Ellen to an animal—with the implication that she was thereby deserving of care and freedom from abuse: “She is a little animal, surely.” Drawing attention to the quotation’s subject, metaphorical and legal underpinnings and inspiration to social action, Robles-Gordon’s exhibition title unleashes a torrent of follow-up questions: “Surely, aren’t I a little animal too?” Understanding

this, Robles-Gordon visually encourages her viewers’ sights toward more considered questions: isn’t the value of life and well-being (be it a Black life or animal life) inherent?

Throughout Surely, she (he/we) is a little animal?, Robles-Gordon extends a formal interplay with landscape, laying horizontal bands of color behind a central totem-like form reminiscent of Robles-Gordon’s earlier use of the Ficus Elastica (or Rubber Tree)—once again cojoining human and non-human. While also lending the compositions a flag-like appearance, Robles-Gordon’s polychromic, thick graphic lines, equally hold their own space and weight, intimating the charged forms and juxtapositions of color theory. Projecting out from the center like a magnifying glass, the circular totem-forms appear to hold a microcosm of figures—figurative portraits of people living under imperialism and/or colonialism—and plant life within a glass-like lens or bowl.

Enclosed in these distorting, circular forms, Robles-Gordon connects her subjects in a great chain of being. Paring human and tree, the series invites association with similar human-tree metaphors: family tree, tree of life, a collective tree of humanity.

Amber Robles-Gordon
Montgomery Brawl, 2023. Mixed media collage on wood. 44 in. x 40 in. Courtesy of the artist and Morton Fine Art

Recurring across the works are painterly, coded renderings of flora (snake plants, flowering plants) and fauna (dogs, butterflies and birds), Mary Ellen Wilson and references to the Civil Rights, Black Lives Matter and child protection movements. Collaged images of Mary Ellen Wilson and piles of cute dogs, visually hold up the sphere. Yet upon inspection some dogs are not fully rendered. Robles-Gordon uses bold black lines, fences and snake plants as lines of delineation for protection and separation. Snake plants additionally aid in purification and cleansing, while also bringing luck, prosperity, and positive energy. Amassed together, this ball of history, nature and humanity forms a peculiar picture plane of the racialized past and current treatment of people of color. Never losing sight of the material dimension (whether that be commodities and capital or the ingredients and surface of her mixed media collages), Robles-Gordon is creating a mirror-menagerie of people of color, colonized people and children—all who have been treated worse than animals in the pursuit of profit.

Amber Robles-Gordon (b. Puerto Rico) has over fifteen years of exhibiting, art education, and exhibition coordinating experience. She received a Bachelor of Science, Business Administration in 2005 at Trinity University, and subsequently a Master’s in Fine Arts (Painting) in 2011 from Howard University, Washington, DC. At Howard University she received annual awards and accolades for her artwork.

She has exhibited nationally and in Germany, Italy, Malaysia, London, and Spain. Robles-Gordon is proficient in American Sign-Language and has traveled throughout the US, Latin America, the Caribbean, Europe, Northern Africa, and Southeast Asia. Her exhibitions and artwork has been reviewed and/or featured in the Washington Post, Washington City Paper, Washington Informer, Examiner, WAMU American University Radio, WPFW 89.3, MSNBC the grio, Hyperallergic, Ebony.com, Houston Chronicle, Miami Herald, Huffington Post, Bmore Art Magazine, Callaloo Art & Culture in the African Diaspora, Nashville Scene, Sugarcane Magazine, Support Black Art, Bomb Magazine, Indianapolis Recorder and other various publications.

Robles-Gordon was also commissioned to create temporary and permanent public art installations for numerous art fairs and agencies such as the Northern Virginia Fine Arts Association (NVFAA), Howard University, James C. Porter Colloquium, Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, Salisbury University, DC Department of General Services and Democracy Fund.

Additionally, she has been commissioned and or featured to teach workshops, give commentary, and or present about her artwork by organizations such as the Smithsonian Anacostia Museum, Luther College, WETA Television, Al Jazeera, The Kojo Nnamdi Show, David C. Driskell Center, the Phillips Collection, the African American Museum in Philadelphia, Mc Daniel College, Harvey

B. Gantt Center, and National Museum of African American History and Culture.

Throughout her career, she serves as an advocate for the Washington, DC area arts community. From November 2004 through July 2012, Robles-Gordon has been an active member of the Black Artists DC, (BADC) serving as exhibitions coordinator, Vice President and President. BADC, a 20-year old member organization of individuals of Black-Afrikan ancestry, includes artists, arts administrators, educators, dealers, collectors, museum directors, curators, gallery owners, and arts enthusiasts. Robles-Gordon is also the Co-Founder of Delusions of Grandeur Artist Collective.

Currently Robles-Gordon is creating a traveling exhibition in collaboration with Cultural DC and El Cuadrado Gris Galeria in Puerto Rico. Upon completion the exhibition will be presented in both Washington, DC and Puerto Rico in 2024. Additionally in October 2023 her artwork will be a part of Puerto Rico Negrx at the Museo de Arte Contemporaneo de Puerto Rico in San Juan, Puerto Rico. In February 2024, Robles-Gordon will be presenting a solo exhibition at Indiana State University.

She has been represented by Morton Fine Art since 2016.

Morton Fine Art

Founded in 2010 in Washington D.C. by curator Amy Morton, Morton Fine Art (MFA) is a fine art gallery and curatorial group that collaborates with art collectors and visual artists to inspire fresh ways of acquiring contemporary art. Firmly committed to the belief that art collecting can be cultivated through an educational stance, MFA’s mission is to provide accessibility to

museum-quality contemporary art through a combination of substantive exhibitions and a welcoming platform for dialogue and exchange of original voice. Morton Fine Art specializes in a stellar roster of nationally and internationally renowned artists as well as has an additional focus on artwork of the African and Global Diaspora.

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