The Frist Art Museum presents Jeffrey Gibson: The Body Electric, a major exhibition devoted to one of today’s leading artists whose multidisciplinary practice combines aspects of traditional Indigenous art and culture with a modernist visual vocabulary. Organized by SITE Santa Fe, The Body Electric will be on view in the Frist’s Ingram Gallery from February 3 through April 23, 2023, and is part of the Tennessee Triennial for Contemporary Art, a program of Tri-Star Arts.

Born in Colorado in 1972, Jeffrey Gibson is of Cherokee heritage and a member of the Mississippi Band of Choctaw. His vibrant work, which is represented in more than 20 permanent collections across the United States, calls for Indigenous empowerment, Queer visibility, and environmental sustainability. A 2019 MacArthur Fellow and recipient of a “genius grant,” Gibson is recognized for spotlighting “outsider-ness” through a celebration of nonconformity and the power of self-expression.

The Body Electric features Gibson’s recent paintings, sculpture, video, and installations, along with a large site-specific mural. The title of the exhibition is inspired by a song written for the 1980 movie musical Fame, which drew from the 1855 Walt Whitman poem “I Sing the Body Electric” from Leaves of Grass. Lyrics such as “And in time…we will all be stars” reverently acknowledge our place in the natural world, while honoring the universality of endings and beginnings.

“In his explorations of color, form, material, and scale, Gibson references abstract patterns and uses materials like glass beads, fringe, and animal hide that speak to Native American art-making practices,” writes SITE Santa Fe curator Brandee Caoba. He is inspired by a multitude of sources, such as literature, poetry, song lyrics, language, pop music, jazz, punk, politics, fashion, geometric design, Queer identity, pow-wows, drag, and rave culture.

A highlight of The Body Electric is She Never Dances Alone, a video honoring the jingle dress dancers who gathered to defend Standing Rock Reservation from the construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline in 2016. Originally commissioned by Times Square Arts in 2019 for their 2020 Midnight Moment series to be screened across seventy massive monitors in New York, this captivating piece (adapted as a nine-channel video for this exhibition) shows Eastern Shoshone/Northern Arapaho performer Sarah Ortegon dancing to the song “Sisters” by musical group The Halluci Nation (formerly A Tribe Called Red). “Ortegon’s movements link her to a dynamic legacy of dancers and remind viewers that dance has long been a powerful tool of resistance and protection in Indigenous cultures,” writes Caoba.

The immersive installation of the three brightly colored sculptures Red Moon, Desert Sky, and Red Sunset appears as hanging columns made from the kind of nylon shawl fringe commonly found on Native dancers’ regalia. “In this exploration of the material, Gibson repositions fringe from a supporting role to the primary medium, a shift that reflects his interest more generally in centering people and narratives that are often not prioritized,” writes Caoba. “Although the fringe is arranged to evoke bold, solid, monolithic forms, Gibson notes that when the material shifts in response to its surroundings and people moving around them, ‘There is a human quality to the fringe in movement.’”

The exhibition features freestanding sculptures, including one of Gibson’s signature Everlast punching bag works. Caoba explains that Gibson “believes that covering the punching bag, a target of repeated violence, with bead work ‘Indigenizes’ it and transforms it into something beautiful. In doing so, this act aims toward repairing the ruptures caused by colonialism and places agency back into Indigenous hands.” Also included in the exhibition are small, beaded birds that recall “whimsies” made by Haudenosaunee and other Native artists during the Victorian era to sell to tourists in the Niagara Falls region.

Stylized text plays an important part in Gibson’s practice. Often addressing environmental or social concerns, the short, powerful, and lyrical phrases come from various sources. Sometimes Gibson writes the words himself, as he did for THE LAND IS SPEAKING|ARE YOU LISTENING, which expresses frustration with those who recklessly abuse and neglect our ailing planet. In other instances, the phrases come from songs by artists ranging from Culture Club to Stevie Wonder to Frankie Valli. This exhibition includes paintings, prints, and sculptures that contain such phrases as “THE FUTURE IS PRESENT,” “I AM A RAINBOW TOO,” and “KNOW YOU’RE MAGICK BABY.”

Gibson sees the act of hammering as akin to beating a drum—a call to action, a rallying song, a moment of destruction with the possibility of rebuilding. The garment and drum from his 2016 performance Like a Hammer are on view in the exhibition across from a video documenting the occasion. “Gibson’s performance is a call to dismantle stereotypes and build a new future that decolonizes museums and makes space for Indigenous and Queer people in contemporary art,” writes Caoba.

The Body Electric is complemented by an audio tour that features Jeffrey Gibson speaking about select works and will be available in English, Spanish, and with ASL interpretation. In the Frist’s Martin ArtQuest® Gallery, related experiential activities highlight the vibrant colors, textures, and sounds of the exhibition while exploring Gibson’s multidisciplinary techniques and cultural references. A full schedule of public programs will be updated at FristArtMuseum.org and on social media @FristArtMuseum.

Jeffrey Gibson holds an MA from the Royal College of Art in London and a BFA from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago. He is currently a visiting artist at Bard College in New York. He is represented in the permanent collections of museums including the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Denver Art Museum, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Portland Museum of Art, High Museum of Art, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, and Seattle Art Museum. Gibson is a 2019 MacArthur Fellow.

Guided by artists, rooted in New Mexico, SITE Santa Fe celebrates contemporary creative expression. SITE Santa Fe aspires to be a community resource for creativity and learning and an internationally recognized destination for art and artists.

Founded in 1995 to establish the first international contemporary art biennial in the United States, SITE Santa Fe is a non-collecting art institution committed to supporting new developments in contemporary art, encouraging artistic exploration, and expanding traditional museum experiences. Since its launch, SITE Santa Fe has presented 11 international biennials, more than 100 contemporary art exhibitions, and works by hundreds of emerging and established artists from around the world and in New Mexico. SITE Santa Fe also presents a wide range of public and educational programs that include conversations with artists and curators, performances, film screenings, concerts, hands-on workshops, and collaborations with dozens of local schools and community organizations.

Programs

Thursday, February 2                                  
Member’s Preview: Jeffrey Gibson: The Body Electric
12:00pm – 5:30 p.m. 

Reservations are not required

As a benefit of membership, Frist Art Museum’s members are invited to enjoy exclusive viewings of their new exhibitions at member previews. Member previews take place the day before new exhibitions open to the public. Then, on the Sunday following every member preview, they host Member Mornings—a dedicated time for members to enjoy their galleries without the crowds!

Thursday, February 2                                  
Artist’s Perspective: Jeffrey Gibson
6:30 p.m.                                                        
Auditorium
Free; first come, first seated

In celebration of the opening of The Body Electric, join Jeffrey Gibson in conversation with Frist Art Museum senior curator Katie Delmez to learn more about Gibson’s multidisciplinary artistic practice.

Sunday, February 5                                  
Member Morning: Jeffrey Gibson: The Body Electric
11:00a.m. – 1:00 p.m.                                                        
Reservations are not required

As a benefit of membership, Frist Art Museum’s members are invited to enjoy exclusive viewings of our new exhibitions at member previews and Member Mornings. Member previews take place the day before new exhibitions open to the public. Then, on the Sunday following every member preview, they host Member Mornings—a dedicated time for members to enjoy their galleries without the crowds!

Thursday, February 16                                 
Artist’s Perspective: Jeffrey Gibson
1:30 p.m. – 2:00p.m.                                                        
Presented on Zoom; free, registration required

Join Frist Art Museum wherever you are for a Frist at Home online tour—a closer look at some of the art currently at the museum. Spend thirty minutes in the company of their docents and other art lovers. This conversation will focus on Jeffrey Gibson: The Body Electric.

Thursday, March 16                                  
Artist’s Perspective: Jeffrey Gibson
1:30 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.                                                        
Auditorium
Presented on Zoom, free, registration required

Join Frist Art Museum wherever you are for a Frist at Home online tour—a closer look at some of the art currently at the museum. Spend thirty minutes in the company of their docents and other art lovers. This conversation will focus on Jeffrey Gibson: The Body Electric.

Exhibition Credit

Organized by SITE Santa Fe and curated by Brandee Caoba

Supporter Acknowledgment

Platinum Sponsor: HCA Healthcare/TriStar Health

Spanish Translation Sponsor: Center for Latin American, Caribbean, and Latinx Studies at Vanderbilt University

Education and Community Engagement supporter: Windgate Foundation

The Frist Art Museum is supported in part by The Frist Foundation, Metro Arts, the Tennessee Arts Commission, and the National Endowment for the Arts.

Connect with @FristArtMuseum #TheFrist #FristJeffreyGibson