April 8: Richard Mosse, “Tristes Tropiques” . Jack Shainman Gallery

Martin Cid Magazine
Martin Cid Magazine

Opening April 8: Richard Mosse, “Tristes Tropiques”

Jack Shainman Gallery is pleased to present Tristes Tropiques, Richard Mosse’s expansive new body of work on view across the gallery’s 20th and 24th Street locations through May 15. Please note there will not be an opening reception.

The gallery will continue to take the following health and safety precautions. Please do not come to the gallery if you are feeling unwell. Gallery visitors and staff will be required to wear a mask at all times. Hand sanitizer will be available at the gallery entrance. Please observe social distancing guidelines of six feet with all other visitors and staff. We will be limiting visitors, so we appreciate your understanding and cooperation if you are asked to wait outside before entering.

Tristes Tropiques showcases a series of large-scale photographic maps which describe sites of environmental crimes unfolding across Brazil’s ‘arc of fire’. These vibrantly hued topographic images show frangible organic matter dominated by extractive violence at the hand of man. The colors are electric, yet articulate highly detailed organic landscapes, revealing a highly vulnerable biome. The works are living maps that show signs of life, but also encapsulate forest dieback, tipping points and ecocide.

Employing geographic interpretation system (GIS) technology, Mosse processed thousands of multispectral images captured above each site by drone to create searing maps that highlight areas of extractive environmental violence. Multispectral imaging is used by scientific groups to detect deforestation and ecological damage and pinpoint areas of concentrated CO2 release, toxic pollution and other aspects of damage to the fragile ecosystem. However, this powerful technology is also widely employed in agribusiness and mineralogy to more profitably exploit the environment. Mosse uses the medium reflexively, as an artist and a storyteller, to create maps that yield a disarming, gestural aesthetic force, while revealing traces of these complex ecological narratives, at turns geopolitical, multinational, local and cultural, the effects of which can be difficult to perceive in time and space.

Tristes Tropiques is an example of what artist and cartographer Denis Woods has termed “counter mapping”, a form of resistance mapmaking intended to reveal endangered landscapes, describing human activities that threaten the entire Amazon and our global climate. In Subterranean Fire, Mosse’s process vividly reveals the buried traces of fire advancing along desiccated underground roots in the Pantanal ecosystem, a quarter of which was lost to unprecedented fires last summer. The traces of subterranean fire cannot easily be seen by the human eye but are expressed here with the aesthetic power and scale of color field painting. In the diptych Juvencio’s Mine, the devastation of illegal gold mining practices carried out on a protected national forest reserve is exposed with irradiated clarity. In Aldeia Enawenê-nawê, the map reveals a recently contacted indigenous community’s cyclical engagement with their environment, one that produces little waste. Each map in Tristes Tropiques carries a wealth of data, showing the extractive processes, effects and infrastructure along a vast, advancing front line of deforestation, land invasion, agribusiness, illegal mining and environmental crime.

Born in Ireland in 1980, Richard Mosse explores the boundaries between documentary forms and contemporary art. Works from Tristes Tropiques, as well as Mosse’s critically acclaimed series Heat Maps and Infra will feature in Richard Mosse: Displaced, his first major survey exhibition, opening this spring at MAST Foundation, Bologna, Italy, accompanied by a comprehensive monograph. A second exhibition, examining his career in-depth, will open at Kunsthalle Bremen in 2022. An immersive video installation accompanying Tristes Tropiques is currently under production. Co-commissioned by the National Gallery of Victoria, Melbourne and the VIA Art Production Fund, the work will debut in 2022. In association with this new project, Mosse has been awarded a 2021 remote residency with Arts at CERN in partnership with the Didier and Martine Primat Foundation and its special fund Odonata, Geneva. Past honors include the Prix Pictet (2018), the Deutsche Börse Photography Prize (2014), representing Ireland at the 55th Venice Biennale in 2013, and a Guggenheim Fellowship (2011) among others. Recent solo exhibitions include Incoming at the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (2019), National Gallery of Art, Washington DC (2019), and the Barbican Art Gallery, London (2017).

Upcoming exhibitions at the gallery include Leslie Wayne at our 24th Street space and a group show featuring Lyne LapointeHayv KahramanNick Cave and Carlos Vega at our 20th Street space, both opening May 20, 2021.

Gallery hours are Tuesday through Saturday from 10 am to 6 pm

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