Mustafa Ali Clayton : VA Curated by Karon Davis

26 March - 14 May 2022
Overview

Wilding Cran Gallery is pleased to present VA, by Mustafa Ali Clayton, curated by Karon Davis, a meditation on the iconography of Black womanhood through a personification of fertility, endurance, grace, and fortitude. 

 

Drawing upon past aesthetic and thematic explorations, Clayton’s practice is deeply rooted in adapting traditional techniques to contemporary subject matter. With an interest in utilizing organic and sustainable materials, the Los Angeles-based artist grounds his work in the natural elements of the earth, weaving in references to history and lineage through a process that spans oil painting, quilting, beading, ceramics, and assemblage. Much like the natural world, powerful yet vulnerable, Clayton’s deliberate use of earth sourced fibers, clay, wax, wood, beads, and pigments, allow his viewers to experience the intimate and labor-intensive aspects of his process. 

 

Throughout the exhibition, Clayton’s raw reverence and respect of our relationship to the earth, is dually reflected within the energy of his subjects. Built around a central female figure, VA seeks to illuminate the multitudinous components of Black womanhood, while simultaneously confronting and questioning the legacy of such iconography. The larger-than-life ceramic countenance is glazed in a luminous, mirrored ebony, mounted atop a tiered wooden pedestal displaying various ceramic shampoo bottles and creams. The inclusion of such products alludes to daily rituals of purity, hygiene, and personal care. Placed alongside a bowl painted robin’s egg blue, a symbol of fertility, these products recall the notion of the body as sacred; they are totems of cleanliness, next to holiness incarnate. 

 

Surrounded by a constellation of smaller ceramic portraits, the installation’s central figure pays homage to the cyclical and restorative nature of ancestry, fertility, creation, and reckoning. The exhibition’s title, VA, refers to the postal abbreviation for the state of Virginia, often dubbed the “birthplace of a nation.” Named for the open, resplendent, undeveloped land of a “new world,” and the Virgin Queen Elizabeth I, the colony served as one of the major ports of the Transatlantic Slave Trade. In reflecting upon the symbolic implications of VA, the viewer is able to recognize Clayton’s rendering of a new image and ethos for icons of the virginal, fertile, and powerful woman. 

 

In addition to the central goddess figure, Clayton has created hand-adorned sea chests, a sculptural allegory for travelling by sea. Unlike a functional sailor’s chest, historically used to store personal belongings, the chests presented within VA lie empty, as though holding space. With delicately crafted, hand-beaded beckets, the deep colors of the chests themselves are punctuated with vibrant hues of soft blues, corals, and seafoam green, conjuring the impressionistic shades of sunrise at sea, of a new dawn. 

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