2017.16, Theaster Gates, Ground rules. Red square for floor hockey and nigger sports


GENERAL DESCRIPTION  
Theaster Gates collapses art and life in his work as a sculptor and urban planner. His expansive practice is underpinned by a belief in social transformation through direct spatial intervention. Gates’s art often includes found objects that he collects in ambitious urban projects, such as rehabilitating buildings in order to transform them into cultural hubs for underserved neighborhoods. Part of what Gates describes as a “circular ecological system,” the renovations of the buildings are financed entirely by the sale of art created from the materials salvaged from their interiors. For this work, the artist repurposed the wooden planks of a gym from a Chicago high school that was closed by the city in 2014. In the work’s title, Gates, who is African American, points to this history and how it has shaped the experience of Black Americans in his hometown. 

Excerpt from
Anna Katherine Brodbeck, ed., TWO X TWO X TWENTY: Two Decades Supporting Contemporary Art at the Dallas Museum of Art (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art), 2018, 274.

NOTES
Did not get object file- streamlined process, no provenance. CLC, 11/15/18.  

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

IMAGE ASSETS

WEB RESOURCES 

ARCHIVAL RESOURCES

FUN FACTS

TEACHING IDEAS

RULES
Apply to objects where number equals 2017.16

Category
rules_operator
AND
General Description
 
Theaster Gates collapses art and life in his work as a sculptor and urban planner. His expansive practice is underpinned by a belief in social transformation through direct spatial intervention. Gates’s art often includes found objects that he collects in ambitious urban projects, such as rehabilitating buildings in order to transform them into cultural hubs for underserved neighborhoods. Part of what Gates describes as a “circular ecological system,” the renovations of the buildings are financed entirely by the sale of art created from the materials salvaged from their interiors. For this work, the artist repurposed the wooden planks of a gym from a Chicago high school that was closed by the city in 2014. In the work’s title, Gates, who is African American, points to this history and how it has shaped the experience of Black Americans in his hometown. 

Excerpt from
Anna Katherine Brodbeck, ed., TWO X TWO X TWENTY: Two Decades Supporting Contemporary Art at the Dallas Museum of Art (Dallas: Dallas Museum of Art), 2018, 274.

Fun Facts

Archival Resources

Web Resources
 

Notes
Did not get object file- streamlined process, no provenance. CLC, 11/15/18.  

Catalogue essays

Artist/designers

Cultures

Geography 

Process/materials

Historical periods

Individuals

Subject terms

RELATED OBJECTS 

PROVENANCE 

AUDIO ASSETS 

VIDEO ASSETS

rules
Apply To
Objects
number
Equals
2017.16
tags
#draft
#completed
%Archived
*Contemporary Art
@Courtney
%TMS pending
%Geo pending
wood (plant material): AAT: 300011914
#routed
%copyedited_Jennie
geometry: AAT: 300054529
Postminimalism: AAT: 300112731
floors (surface elements): AAT: 300002060
sculptor (artists by medium): AAT: 300025181
African American: AAT: 300018125
urban landscapes: AAT: 300132447
found objects: AAT: 300047210
race (group of people): AAT: 300256475
Gates_Theaster: ULAN: 500294129
participatory art: AAT: 300417632
gymnasiums: AAT: 300007297
source file
object_notes_1_a-0088.xml.nores