Sometimes an artist finds community, but at other times community finds the artist.
In the case of Twin Cities-based artist/curator Gregory J. Rose, he wanted to find other artists working in Black Abstraction, so he put out an open call for an exhibition that would focus on exactly that.
"Since the uprising and George Floyd, art has been at the forefront of protests and healing and communication and community," Rose said. "I wanted to find out who my peers were because I've lived here since 2001."
His answers came together in the group show "Change Is God — Take Root Among the Stars: Black Abstraction in the Midwest," now on view at Soo Visual Arts Center in Minneapolis. Seventeen artists who call the Midwest home — with one in Oklahoma who made a case for that state as part of the region — make up the mix of two- and three-dimensional work in this show, which includes painting, installation, quilt, video and sculpture.
Abstract power
Abstract art feels more like music in the sense that one will look and feel rather than immediately recognize faces and places and then assign meaning. In an academic study published in 2020 in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), researchers found that abstract art can help people understand things more conceptually instead of realistically, evoking "far away" feelings.
Eight of the artists in the show call the Twin Cities home. Stephanie A. Lindquist's four abstract photographs and lightboxes, arranged on the floor like a spawning organism, are actually representations of mold growing from Minnesota to West Africa.
Sarah White's dynamic installation is a hanging white canvas with electromagnetic lines squiggled across it and a faint video projection of a Black woman tying a rope around herself and then reclining on the ground.