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Tony Cokes

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American artist (born 1956)
Tony Cokes
Cokes pictured in 2024
Born1956 (age 68–69)
Richmond, Virginia, U.S.
EducationGoddard College
Virginia Commonwealth University (MFA)
Occupation(s)Visual artist, educator

Tony Cokes (born 1956)[1] is an American visual artist and educator.[2][3]

Early life and education

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Cokes was born inRichmond, Virginia. He studied photography and creative writing atGoddard College, and received an MFA degree (1985) in sculpture fromVirginia Commonwealth University.[4]

Art career

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In 1995,Renee Cox,Fo Wilson, and Tony Cokes created the Negro Art Collective (NAC) to fight cultural misrepresentations about Black Americans.[5]

Artwork

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Cokes's artwork concerns popular culture and mass entertainment. In the 1990s, he was part of the band X-PRZ. His videos often take the form of essays in which Cokes displays fragments of found texts on brightly-colored backgrounds,[6] set to popular music.[7] They are essays with musical accompaniment.[8] He is known to combine quotes from a range of texts from critical theory, cultural studies, art criticism, and news reports.[9] His sources includeLouis Althusser,Malcolm X,Public Enemy, andWilliam Burroughs.[9]

In 1988 Cokes used newsreel footage of theriots in urbanblack neighborhoods in the 1960s along with 80sindustrial music and text commentary to createBlack Celebration; a rebellion against the commodity. Cokes wrote that the intent of the piece was to introduce a reading that will contradict received ideas which characterize those riots as criminal or irrational.[10] He has said he is fascinated by the problem of how violence is represented when people not the state enact it.[11]

In this work Cokes juxtaposes the old news reel footage with written commentary fromMorrisey,Guy Debord,Barbara Kruger, andMartin Gore. Cokes’ use of text alludes to the constructs of race in America and the economic challenges created by those constructs.[11] One slide features aGuy Debord quote, “The theft of large refrigerators by people with no electricity or with their electricity cut off is the best image of the lie of affluence transformed into truth in play”.[12] Soon after in the piece theSkinny Puppy soundtrack has echoing voices that mirror the empty shells of burned-out buildings. Cokes’ art is disturbing, haunting and capable of getting the viewer to question what they think they know.[13]

William S. Smith says in Art In America, “Cokes’ working method enables him to respond to current events while continuing his longstanding investigation of race in popular culture”.[14] Created in 1988 this video maintains a timelessness when viewed in the light of theBlack Lives Matter movement and the most recent rounds of police perpetrated violence against the Black community.  Cokes’ work highlights the dissonance of the media coverage of the ongoing movement for racial justice where protests remain framed as violent flare-ups, despite incidents being statistically few and far between. His work asks the viewer what is valid protest and to show that the line between protest and rioting is not a line at all but a continuum.[11]

Teaching

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Cokes teaches atBrown University and lives and works in Providence, Rhode Island.[7] Cokes offered a virtual artist lecture at his alma mater, Virginia Commonwealth University on March 4, 2021.[15]

Awards and honors

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Cokes was named a 2024MacArthur Fellow.[16]

Exhibitions

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Cokes work has been exhibited at theMuseum of Modern Art, theWhitney Museum of American Art, theStudio Museum in Harlem, theLong Beach Museum of Art, the Kitchen, and Artists Space.[4] He was included in the 10th Berlin Biennale,[17][18] and has shown at the Hessel Museum, Whitechapel Gallery, ZKM Karlsruhe, and Goldsmiths Center for Contemporary Art.[19] Cokes is represented by Greene Naftali Gallery in New York.[20] Cokes was included in a 2019 exhibition atThe Shed.[21] Recent solo exhibitions include CIRCA, London (2021);[22] Museu d’Art Contemporani de Barcelona, Barcelona (2020);[23] ARGOS center for audiovisual arts, Brussels (2020),[15] Memorial Art Gallery, Rochester (2021).[24]

References

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  1. ^"UbuWeb Film & Video: Tony Cokes".ubu.com. Retrieved2020-02-26.
  2. ^Boucher, Brian (2012-12-23)."Tony Cokes".Art in America. Retrieved2019-08-18.
  3. ^"Tony Cokes | MoMA".The Museum of Modern Art. Retrieved2019-08-18.
  4. ^ab"Word 2 My Mother, Museum of Modern Art, Press Release"(PDF). November 1991.
  5. ^"Wilson, Fo. (active Milwaukee, WI, 2010)".African American Visual Artists Database (AAVAD). 2010-09-17. Archived fromthe original on 2010-09-17. Retrieved2022-02-14.
  6. ^"Tony Cokes at Greene Naftali Gallery".www.artforum.com. Retrieved2019-08-24.
  7. ^ab"Tony Cokes - Announcements - e-flux".www.e-flux.com. Retrieved2019-08-18.
  8. ^Smith, Roberta; Farago, Jason; Schwendener, Martha; Steinhauer, Jillian (2018-05-23)."What to See in New York Art Galleries This Week".The New York Times.ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved2019-08-24.
  9. ^ab"Electronic Arts Intermix: Tony Cokes : Biography".www.eai.org. Retrieved2019-08-18.
  10. ^"Tony Cokes: "Black Celebration (A Rebellion Against the Commodity)" | Hammer Museum".hammer.ucla.edu. 9 June 2019. Retrieved2021-04-09.
  11. ^abcDer Kunst, Haus (Dec 11, 2017)."Artist Talk; "Black Celebrations Sound and Vision"".YouTube.
  12. ^Debord, Guy (1970).The Society of the Spectacle. Translated by Perlman, Fredy; Supak, Jon (Revised 1977 ed.). Red & Black.
  13. ^Duplan, Anais (Winter 2019). "Tony Cokes, Black Celebration, 1988, 17 mins. 17 secs".Virginia Quarterly Review.95 (4) – via Project Muse.
  14. ^"Art in America - Tony Cokes in Conversation with William S. Smith - Recent Press - Greene Naftali".www.greenenaftaligallery.com. Retrieved2021-04-09.
  15. ^ab"Tony Cokes: Selector".www.argosarts.org. Retrieved2021-04-09.
  16. ^Blair, Elizabeth (October 1, 2024)."Here's who made the 2024 MacArthur Fellows list".NPR. Retrieved3 October 2024.
  17. ^"*The Tony Cokes Remixes* No. 1". 17 June 2018.
  18. ^"The Tony Cokes Remixes No. 2 - Events - Berlin Biennale".
  19. ^"Goldsmiths CCA — TONY COKES".goldsmithscca.art. Retrieved2019-08-24.
  20. ^"Greene Naftali Gallery".www.greenenaftaligallery.com. Retrieved2019-08-24.
  21. ^"Collision/Coalition".The Shed. Retrieved2019-10-01.
  22. ^"February 2021".Circa.art. Archived fromthe original on 2021-05-09. Retrieved2021-04-09.
  23. ^"Tony Cokes. Música, text, política [Reportatge fotogràfic exposició] | MACBA Museum of Contemporary Art of Barcelona".www.macba.cat. Retrieved2021-04-09.
  24. ^"Tony Cokes: Market of the Senses. Exhibition at the Memorial Art Gallery". Retrieved2021-10-25.
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