Monica Majoli

Last updated
Monica Majoli
Born1963
Los Angeles, CA
Alma materUniversity of California, Los Angeles
Known forPainting, Drawing, Queer art
Notable work
Rubbermen series, Black Mirror series
StyleRealism
Websitemonicamajoli.com

Monica Majoli (born 1963 in Los Angeles CA [1] ) is an American artist whose artwork examines the relationship between physicality and consciousness, expressed through the documentary sexual image. [2] Her work explores intimacy through sexuality, and some aspects of alternative lifestyles such as BDSM.

Contents

Education

Majoli earned her MFA (1992) and BA (1989) from the University of California, Los Angeles, where she focused primarily on painting and drawing, developing a process-based, time-intensive approach which result in discreet bodies of work. She is a Professor of Art in Painting and Graduate Studies at the University of California, Irvine. She has also taught at UC Berkeley and the Graduate Studies program at Yale University School of Art. [2]

Early works (1990 - 1998)

According to the Whitney Museum of American Art, Majoli's "figurative paintings from the early 1990s to the present have depicted scenes of sexual fetishism." [3] Majoli's work Investigates "themes and rituals of identity, intimacy, and mortality" and "is both a site for catharsis and an admission of its irresolution." [3] In her early works, she focused on oil painting on panel indebted to European painting of the 16th to 19th centuries in a method of layering binder and oil paint developed in Northern Renaissance painting. [4] She used this method and style to create highly detailed and realistic homoerotic scenes and depictions of her own body. These explicit paintings are said to be less so a focus on the physical experience itself than on the psychological aspects and consequences of these acts. [3]

In an interview with Paulina McFarland for Art XX Magazine, Majoli stated, "My use of sexuality revolves around the desire to stimulate a visceral response in the viewer to the actualities of our physical nature. SM, which has been the dominant form of sexuality that I employ visually, is useful to me, as it highlights the psychological nature of sexuality and consciousness." [5] These works reference both her own sexuality and sexuality in general, including a life-size portrait of the artist holding a dildo, while a possible reference to Linda Benglis' 1974 Artforum Ad, Majoli's depiction is intimate and personal.

Rubbermen (1999 - 2007)

Her Rubberman series was featured in the 2006 Whitney Biennial and the 2006 Berlin Biennial of Contemporary Art at KW Institute of Contemporary Art, The Museum of Modern Art, New York, the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, the Getty Research Institute, Los Angeles and the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Los Angeles all include works from the Rubbermen series in their permanent collections. [2]

This series consists of watercolor paintings depicting scenes of men in latex rubber, many of them bound in rope and/or chains. The concept was derived from the magazine Rubber Rebel published in Los Angeles in the mid-1990s and bondage discipline magazines and product catalogs from the period of production. [5] Her stylized depictions of fetish based sexual activity alludes to sex as a tool, rather than a curiosity. The tonal palette and ethereal nature of wet-in-wet watercolor allow for the exploration of a deeper consciousness in relation to sexuality and the complications of intimacy. [6]

Black Mirror (2009 - 2014)

In the Black Mirror series, Majoli paints in a tenebrous style reminiscent of Caravaggio and Georges de La Tour. The idea itself came from the floor to ceiling black mirrors encircling the walls of the master bedroom of her Los Angeles home, originally installed in the 1970s by a previous owner. Black Mirror, includes portraits of women that Majoli had relationships with over a 25-year period, "their profiles drawn in close-up in colored pencil, forming a chiaroscuro effect on the sheets of black paper." [4] The "polished nocturnal portraits" are made from photographs Majoli took of the women positioned in front of the black mirrors, and according to Majoli, "The otherworldly half-image that is reflected by black mirror coincides with both the internal state of desire and a crisis in belief in representational painting. In these works, the surface itself holds the fetishistic power, rather than the act depicted." [4] Through the conjuring of absence, the work also explores the separation from her Italian father (a lithographer based in Milan, who inspired her to use lithography in the non-representational component of the series). The dark tonality of the palette is used to obscure the women, as if fading away from distance. [7] Black Mirror (Kate), 2010-2012 is in the permanent collection of the Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco.

Current work

Blueboys is a body of watercolor paintings Majoli began in 2015 from images culled from the first National gay magazine, blueboy, published in Florida from 1974-2007 by Don Westbrook (Donald N. Embinder) which Majoli is examining as a metaphor for gay liberation and self-realization prefiguring the AIDS epidemic. [8]

Exhibitions

2016"Coming to Power: 25 Years of X-Plicit Art by Women", MaccaroneNew York, NY
2009"Compass in Hand: Selections from The Judith Rothschild Foundation Contemporary Drawing Collection", Museum of Modern ArtNew York
2009"Everywhere: Sexual Diversity Policies in Art," Centro Galego de Arte ContemporaneaSpain
2007"Eden's Edge: 15 L.A. Artists," the Hammer MuseumLos Angeles, CA
2006"Into Me/Out of Me," P.S. 1 Contemporary Art CenterNew York
2002"Supereal" Marella Arte ContemporaneaMilan, Italy
2002"LA Post-Cool," San Jose Museum of ArtSan Jose, CA
1997"Scene of the Crime," the Hammer MuseumLos Angeles, CA
1995"In a Different Light," Berkeley Art MuseumBerkeley, CA
Solo Exhibitions
Air de Paris, France1995, 2007, 2010, 2014
L&M Arts, Los Angeles, CA2012
Gagosian Gallery, New York, NY2006
Feature, Inc.1998

Related Research Articles

Masami Teraoka

Masami Teraoka is an American contemporary artist. His work includes Ukiyo-e-influenced woodcut prints and paintings in watercolor and oil.

Dana Schutz is an American artist who lives and works in Brooklyn, New York. Schutz is known for her gestural, figurative paintings that often take on specific subjects or narrative situations as a point of departure.

Tomma Abts is a German-born visual artist known for her abstract oil paintings. Abts won the Turner Prize in 2006. She currently lives and works in London, England.

Salomon Huerta is a painter based in Los Angeles, California who comes from Tijuana, Mexico and grew up in the Boyle Heights Projects in East Los Angeles. Salomón Huerta received a full scholarship to attend the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena, and completed his MFA at UCLA in 1998. Huerta gained critical acclaim and commercial attention in the late 1990s for his minimalist portraits of the backs of people's heads and color saturated depictions of domestic urban architecture. He was included in the 2000 Whitney Biennial and has been featured in numerous exhibitions around the US, Europe, and Latin America such as The Gagosian Gallery in London, England and Studio La Città in Verona, Italy. Salomón Huerta is currently represented by Louise Alexander Gallery/There There in Los Angeles, California and Porto Cervo, Italy.

Jutta Koether is a German artist, musician and critic based in New York City and Berlin since the early 1990s.

Gladys M. Nilsson is an American artist, one of the original Hairy Who Chicago Imagists, a group in the 1960s and 1970s who turned to representational art. Her paintings "set forth a surreal mixture of fantasy and domesticity in a continuous parade of chaotic images." She is married to fellow-artist and Hairy Who member Jim Nutt.

R. H. Quaytman is an American contemporary artist, best known for paintings on wood panels, using abstract and photographic elements in site-specific "Chapters", now numbering thirty-four. Each chapter is guided by architectural, historical and social characteristics of the original site. Since 2008, her work has been collected by a number of modern art museums. She is also an educator and author based in Connecticut.

Ellen Gallagher American painter

Ellen Gallagher is an American artist. Her work has been shown in numerous solo and group exhibitions and is held in the permanent collections of many major museums. Her media include painting, works on paper, film and video. Some of her pieces refer to issues of race, and may combine formality with racial stereotypes and depict "ordering principles" society imposes.

Frances Stark

Frances Stark is an interdisciplinary artist and writer, whose work centers on the use and meaning of language, and the translation of this process into the creative act. She often works with carbon paper to hand-trace letters, words, and sentences from classic works by Emily Dickinson, Goethe, Henry Miller, Samuel Beckett, and others to explore the voices and interior states of writers. She uses these hand-traced words, often in repetition, as visual motifs in drawings and mixed media works that reference a subject, mood, or another discipline such as music, architecture, or philosophy.

Joan Semmel

Joan Semmel is an American feminist painter, professor, and writer. She is best known for her large scale realistic nude self portraits as seen from her perspective looking down.

Richard Hawkins is an American artist. He lives and works in Los Angeles. His works are held by museums including the Whitney Museum of American Art, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Art Institute of Chicago.

Judie Bamber is an American artist based in Los Angeles. Her often representational paintings explore themes of gender, sexuality, temporality, and memory. She teaches in the Master of Fine Arts program at Otis College of Art and Design and is best known for Are You My Mother?, which was featured in New American Paintings in 2003 and 2004. Her paintings, watercolors and graffiti emphasize women's pleasure, as well as to permeate her family history.

Eileen Cowin American artist and photographer

Eileen Cowin is a Los Angeles-based artist known for photography, video and mixed-media installations that draw on the language of mass media and art history and explore the relationship between narrative, fiction and non-fiction, memory and experience. Associated with the 1970s Los Angeles experimental photography scene and the Pictures Generation artists, her work combines familiar human situations and carefully chosen gestures, expressions and props to create enigmatic images whose implied, open-ended stories viewers must complete. Cowin has exhibited in more than forty solo shows in the United States and abroad, including at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA), Museum of Contemporary Photography, Armory Center for the Arts and Contemporary Arts Center. Her work is included in more than forty institutional collections, including LACMA, the J. Paul Getty Museum, Brooklyn Museum, Art Institute of Chicago, San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA), and Smithsonian American Art Museum. She has been recognized with awards and commissions from the National Endowment for the Arts, LACMA, the City of Los Angeles (COLA), Public Art Fund, and the Sundance and USA film festivals. New York Times critic Andy Grundberg wrote that her multi-image work "sets up a tension between the familiar and the mysterious, creating a climate of implied danger, sexual intrigue and violence" in which clues abound to intimate various narratives. Jody Zellen observed that Cowin "manipulates the conventions of photography, film, and video to tell a different kind of story—one that explores where truth and fiction merge, yet presents no conclusions. Cowin's work provokes."

Deana Lawson (1979) is an American artist, educator and photographer, based in Brooklyn, New York. Her work is primarily concerned with intimacy, family, spirituality, sexuality, and Black aesthetics.

Hannah Black is a visual artist, critic, and writer. Her work spans video, text and performance and draws on communism, feminist, and Afro-pessimist theory, autobiographical fragments and pop music. She is best known for her open letter criticizing the curators of the 2017 Whitney Biennial for exhibiting Dana Schultz's painting Open Casket.

Jay Lynn Gomez, is an American artist who lives in West Hollywood, California. Her artwork addresses social justice issues, focusing specifically on topics of immigration, race, and labor. While her work demonstrates a variety of styles and media, including canvas, cardboard, magazine, and paper, her message remains to bring the Latino domestic and menial workforce to the forefront of public discourse. Gomez works with California-based art dealer, Charlie James Gallery, exhibiting her pieces in installations and exhibitions nationwide. She and her art have also been recognized and promoted by news media, giving the Latino community a platform to voice their story. Much of her work highlights the efforts of often unseen laborers who maintain landscapes and produce luxury products.

Martha Joanne Alf was an American artist. Her work consists of paintings, drawings and photographs of everyday objects, including pears and rolls of toilet paper.

Janiva Ellis is an American painter based in Brooklyn, NY and Los Angeles, CA. Ellis often makes figurative paintings that explore the African-American female experience.

Tomashi Jackson is an American multimedia artist working across painting, video, textiles and sculpture. Jackson was born in Houston, Texas, raised in Los Angeles, and currently lives and works in New York, NY and Cambridge, MA. Jackson was named a 2019 Whitney Biennial participating artist. Jackson also serves on the faculty for sculpture at Rhode Island School of Design. Her work is included in the collection of MOCA Los Angeles. In 2004, a 20-foot-high by 80-foot-long mural by Jackson entitled Evolution of a Community was unveiled in the Los Angeles neighborhood of West Adams.

Elle Pérez is an American photographer whose work explores gender identity, intimacy, vulnerability, and the relationship between seeing and love. Pérez is a gender non-conforming trans artist.

References

  1. "Bio | Monica Majoli". monicamajoli.com. Retrieved 2018-04-22.
  2. 1 2 3 "Monica Majoli" . Retrieved April 19, 2014.
  3. 1 2 3 "Monica Majoli, Whitney Biennial 2006". Whitney Museum of American Art. Retrieved April 19, 2014.
  4. 1 2 3 "Monica Majoli". Art News. Retrieved April 19, 2014.
  5. 1 2 McFarland, Paulina (Spring–Summer 2009). "Interview with Monica Majoli". Art XX Magazine.
  6. Asper, Colleen (2008). "Monica Majoli/Air de Paris" (PDF). Beautiful Decay. Issue 5.
  7. Halberstam, Judith (2011), Black Mirror Interview , retrieved April 22, 2018
  8. Hainely, Bruce. "Blueboys – Monica Majoli – Exhibitions – Galerie Buchholz". Galerie Buchholz.