We Was Girls Together
Featuring Deborah Jack.
On view from September 18 until October 30, 2021.
For inquiries please contact here.
Press: Artsy - Andrea Chung’s Ornate Collages Defy the Colonial Gaze by Celebrating Black Women’s Friendships by Tao Leigh Goffe. Click here to read the article.
Tyler Park Presents is pleased to announce We Was Girls Together, the gallery’s first solo exhibition with San Diego-based artist Andrea Chung featuring the work of New Jersey-based artist Deborah Jack. The exhibition will be on view from September 18 - October 30, 2021.
We Was Girls Together, inspired by Toni Morrison’s book Sula, is a series of large-scale collages that celebrates the relationships of black women in all their complexities and displays Chung’s gratitude for them. As Chung says “Our sisterhood, our love for one another, is not always visible to the unfamiliar, nor should it always be.” She dedicates this exhibition to:
To the black women who are dismissed and appropriated at the same damn time.
To the black women who tell you to be loud.
To the black women who are loud.
To the black women who are made to compete with each other because somebody says there can only be one.
To the black women who know your success is their success, too.
To the black women who hype the shit out of you even if they don’t know you.
To the black women who are the mentors that they wish they had had.
To the black women who check you when you need checking but also when you don’t need to be.
To the black women you only know for a reason or a season but formed meaningful relationships with anyway.
To black women who mind their own goddamn business, and yours too.
To the black women whose friendships didn’t work out. But we tried.
To the black women who make their own families.
To the black women who know it’s hard enough to make friendships as adults without all the rest of this bullshit on top of it.
To the black women who don’t owe the world repair.
To all black women—and all black women means all black women.
Through a variety of different mediums, Chung’s researched-based practice explores labor and materials in their relationship to post-colonial countries, the body, and migration involving perishable and precious materials with strong underlying histories. Each piece in We Was Girls Together depicts ethnographic photographs of different relationships among the women photographed as family, friends, and partnerships collaged within a plethora of flora, shells, rhinestones, beads, and pins. In both her previous and this current series of collage works, Chung protrudes the figures present in the work with a protective barrier similar to the use of Nkisis from the Kongo, driving pins into a figure to give them power or protection and various color beads associated with Orishas that provide further protection.
Continuing the sentiment of relationships, friendships, and love in the exhibition, Chung invited friend, colleague, and fellow artist Deborah Jack to be included in the exhibition. Viewable in the gallery window room is Jack’s video piece titled The Water Between Us Remembers.. The piece is an allegory wherein memory, migration, the Trans-Atlantic slavery, borders, and re-generation are themes and flowers are metaphors for both the wounds of history and the beauty of regeneration. Viewers are introduced to a girl who is both ancestor and descendent, here (in the present) and there (in the past). Her journey begins inland and she makes her way to shore to undergo a transition, through time and distance, as the landscape imprints itself on her body. Her impulse is to perform this ritual as a form of remembering and re-membering what was lost, taken, or forgotten; traveling across visible and invisible boundaries towards the shore and the sea.
Andrea Chung (b. 1978, Newark, NJ) lives and works in San Diego, California. She received a BFA from Parsons School of Design, New York, and a MFA from Maryland Institute College of Art, Baltimore. Her recent biennale and museum exhibitions include the Addison Museum of American Art, Prospect 4, New Orleans and the Jamaican Biennale, Kingston, Jamaica, as well as the Chinese American Museum and California African American Museum in Los Angeles, and the San Diego Art Institute. In 2017, her first solo museum exhibition took place at the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, You broke the ocean in half to be here. She has participated in national and international residencies including the Vermont Studio Center, McColl Center for Visual Arts, Headlands Center for the Arts, and Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture. Her work has been written about in the Artfile Magazine, New Orleans Times, Picayune, Artnet, The Los Angeles Times, and International Review of African-American Art among others. Her work is included in collections such as the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, Rhode Island School of Design Museum, NoVo Foundation, Cleveland Clinic Art & Medicine Institute, Minneapolis Institute of Art, Davis Museum at Wesley College, the Addison Museum of American Art, and the J. Paul Getty Museum.
Deborah Jack, is a multi-disciplinary artist whose work is based in video/sound installation, photography, painting and text. Her work engages a variety of strategies for mining the intersections of histories, cultural memory, ecology and climate change. Her work was most recently on view at TENT Rotterdam, the Perez Art Museum of Miami in the 2019-2020 exhibition The Other Side of Now: Foresight in Contemporary Caribbean Art, and Relational Undercurrents: Contemporary Art of the Caribbean Archipelago, which opened at the Museum of Latin American Art in Los Angeles. Her work has been exhibited at the SITE Santa Fe Biennial, Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Jersey City Museum, The Caribbean Cultural Center African Diaspora Institute, and Delaware Art Museum. Residencies include a Lightwork, the Big Orbit Summer Residency. Her work has been featured and reviewed in the New York Times, Frieze, Art Burst Miami, and Hyperallergic. Deborah is currently a Professor at New Jersey City University. In fall 2021 she will present a 20-year survey exhibition at Pen & Brush in New York City.
*Thank you to the black women who have shown me kindness - Andrea
Tara Duvivier
Carol Chung
Ebony G. Patterson
Deborah Roberts
Stephanie Spaulding
Kimberli Gant
Rehema Barber
Heather Heart
Shelly Brown
Diana Seagram
Lauren Lund
Brianne Lund
Jasmine Victor
Samantha Victor
Beryl LeCadre
Tasha Hanna
Tao Goffe
Leslie King-Hammond
Pamela Phatsimo Sunstrum
Krystal Chung
Schwanda Roundtree
Amy Sherald
Zoe Charlton
Nicole Miller
Carrie Mae Weems
Sharbreon Plummer
Gia Hamilton
Lisa Hoffman
Nicole Caruth
Denise Rogers
Nikki Greene
Myra Greene
Maria Magdelena Campos-Pons
Teka Selman
Jessica Sirmans
Firelei Baez
Marie Elena
Deborah Jack
Lauren Woods
Kristy Gomez
Falasha Brown
Elizabeth Axtman
Desiree C. Bailey
Rashida Bumbray
Shantrelle P. Lewis
Sarah Workneh
Bahia Ramos
Kalia Brooks
Xenobia Bailey
Sonya Clark
Joyce Scott
Lisa Harris
Alisha Wormsley
Nona Faustine Simmons
Yvette Brown
Shinique Smith
Delita Pinchback
Aisha Bell-Caldwell
Kimberly Demby
Phoebe Boswell
Zoe Whitley
Jill Moniz
Jeffreen Hayes
Jessica Wimbley
Sheila Walker
Torkwase Dyson
Oronike Odeleye
Renee Craft
Kamala Kempadoo
Kenyatta Hinkle
Frankie Martin
Kat Anderson
Jodie Lyn-Kee Chow
Fayemi Shakur
Nadia Huggins
Crystal Z. Campbell
Althea LeCadre
Gemma LeCadre
Niama Sandy
Beyonce Knowles Carter
Genevieve Gaignard
Jaqueline Bishop
Kaya Jones Oyejide
Alicia Wiley
Krista A. Thompson
Deana Haggga
Kellie Jones
Amal Alhaag
Babry Asante
Nontsikelelo Mutiti
Denyse Thomasos
Tsedeye Makennon
Ayanna Evans
Rashayla Marie Brown
Adeze Wilford
Lise Ragbir
Suzanne McFayden
Liz Russell
LaChandra Jenkins
Kellie Romany
Aurella Yusef
Tomashi Jackson
Angie Chambers
Allison Glenn
Susan Caldwell
Naima Keith
Erin Gilbert
Sally Frater
Nico Wheadon
Tiana Webb Evans
Lauren Kelley
Abigail DeVille
Bethany Collins
Ellen Gallagher
Chandra McCray
Maren Hassinger
LaTanya Autry
Rosie Gordon-Wallace
Alanna Airtram
Damali Abrams
Angela Nissel
Kimberly Becoat
Marsha Pearse
Vanessa German
Koku Tona
Zoraida Lopez-Diego
ANDREA CHUNG
Sula Never Competed; She Simply Helped Others Define Themselves, IV, 2021
Framed: 55.25 x 35.25 x 2.75 inches (140.34 x 89.535 x 6.98 cm)
Collage, gold ink, pins, and beads on paper handmade from traditional birthing cloth
INV-CHUA-0153
ANDREA CHUNG
Sula Never Competed; She Simply Helped Others Define Themselves, II, 2021
Framed: 55.25 x 70.5 x 2.75 inches (diptych) (140.34 x 179.07 x 6.98 cm)
Collage, gold ink, shells, pins and beads on paper handmade from traditional birthing cloth.
INV-CHUA-0151
ANDREA CHUNG
Sula Never Competed; She Simply Helped Others Define Themselves, III, 2021
Framed: 55.25 x 35.25 x 2.75 inches (140.34 x 89.535 x 6.98 cm)
Collage, gold ink, shells, and beads on paper handmade from traditional birthing cloth.
INV-CHUA-0152
ANDREA CHUNG
Sula Never Competed; She Simply Helped Others Define Themselves, VI, 2021
Framed: 55.25 x 35.25 x 2.75 inches (140.34 x 89.535 x 6.98 cm)
Collage, gold ink, rhinestones, shells, pins, and beads on paper handmade from traditional birthing cloth
INV-CHUA-0155
ANDREA CHUNG
Sula Never Competed; She Simply Helped Others Define Themselves, I, 2021
Framed: 55.25 x 35.25 x 2.75 inches (140.34 x 89.535 x 6.98 cm)
Collage, gold ink, shells, pins, and beads on paper handmade from traditional birthing cloth
INV-CHUA-0150
ANDREA CHUNG
Sula Never Competed; She Simply Helped Others Define Themselves, V, 2021
Framed: 55.25 x 35.25 x 2.75 inches (140.34 x 89.535 x 6.98 cm)
Collage, gold ink, pins and beads on paper handmade from traditional birthing cloth.
INV-CHUA-0154
ANDREA CHUNG
Sula Never Competed; She Simply Helped Others Define Themselves, VII, 2021
Framed: 55.25 x 35.25 x 2.75 inches (140.34 x 89.535 x 6.98 cm)
Collage, gold ink, shells, pins, and beads on paper handmade from traditional birthing cloth
INV-CHUA-0156
DEBORAH JACK
The Water Between Us Remembers.., 2018
15 min and 43 seconds (loop)
Edition 2 of 3+2AP
Single channel video
INV-JACD-0001
*view from outside the gallery