Cheyenne Julien & Tau Lewis
Both artists firmly believe in the power of art-making to alter one’s relationship to the physical world and to initiate a process of healing and self-preservation. Their vulnerable manifestations assert presence in a re-imagined space that negates the erasure of self-expression among marginalized communities.
Lewis’s sculptural practice considers memory, recovery, and personal agency. She collects discarded materials from her surroundings including wire, rebar, furs, and even clothes off her own back, which she cares for as extensions of her own body. These energetically charged markers of time serve as individual time capsules forever connected to the hands or lives through which they previously passed. Lewis repurposes these found objects to create doll-like assemblages, which she imbues with personal identity by means of her own ritual practices. Solid concrete bases and industrial armatures tether her work to the ground while providing strength to her otherwise delicate, soft forms. Despite their identifiable vulnerability, her fictive beings appear “bulletproof”, imbued with the power to protect the memories that they embody.
Julien’s work explores alternative realities, both a coping mechanism and response to the structures of environmental racism that, from an early age, imbued the artists with a strict sense of either belonging or not belonging. Teetering on the edge of Surrealism, her arresting, boldly colored oil paintings depict satirical figures with faces contorted in hyperbolic, emotionally wrought expressions. Her simultaneously tragic and humorous characters appear frozen, caught either mid-action or in a moment of response. Within tightly cropped compositions that provide few contextual clues, the viewer must intuit a narrative within Julien’s dream-like world.
Both Julien and Lewis conceive portraits inspired by the people, places, and things that make up their environments. Although figurative, their work evades naturalistic representation and thereby occupies an untouchable, imaginary space. The artists’ insightful articulations elicit wonder amid their shared dysphoria.
Cheyenne Julien (b. 1994) lives and works in The Bronx, and received her BFA in Painting at the Rhode Island School of Design in 2016. Residencies include the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture, New York, NY; the OxBow School of Art, Saugatuck, MI; the Vermont Studio Center Fellowship, Johnson, VT; BronxArtSpace, Bronx, NY; and an upcoming residency at the Fine Arts Work Center, Provincetown, MA. Julien has had a recent solo exhibition at Smart Objects, Los Angeles. Her work has been included in group exhibitions at Karma, New York; Loyal Gallery, Stockholm; and White Cube Bermondsey, London.
Tau Lewis (b.1993) lives and works in Toronto, Canada. Lewis has had recent solo presentations at Atlanta Contemporary and Frieze New York, with Cooper Cole. She currently has a solo show at Jeffrey Stark, New York. Lewis has been included in group exhibitions at Shrine Gallery, New York; Cooper Cole, Toronto; MoMA PS1, New York; Night Gallery, Los Angeles; and the New Museum, New York.