Untitled, 2024
Video (black and white, silent), 18:51 min., looping

Dionne Lee: Currents
June 28 – August 10, 2024

KQED

Cushion Works presents Currents, the new exhibition by Dionne Lee. Currents furthers the artist’s landscape interventions, and tracks the relationship between the recording and interpretation of place, and how the former often informs the latter. The exhibition consists of silver gelatin photographs and works in video.

Lee’s “rock drawings” are ephemeral inscriptions on stone that incorporate materials including chalk, graphite, and rope. A new suite of photographs primarily features drawings rendered on rock with water, and intentionally explores impermanent marking strategies, limits the number of tools brought to bear on an existing landscape, and aims to apply a non-invasive technology to her contemporary petroglyphs.

The photographs share a visual vocabulary with the downward gaze of archaeological images, though in their personal and ritualistic approach more accurately address an unclassifiable field of knowledge beyond a discrete subject or site.

Currents features three news works in video that effectively set drawings in time. One depicts a spiral holding its form as it floats downstream. In another, the recurring dowsing rod in Lee’s work appears as a shadow that spins and spins, like a scrambled sundial. In the third, content is abstracted to a blur.

Currents addresses not only the flow of water implicated in the artist’s work, but also the transmission of energy between transmitter and receiver, place and body.

 

Dionne Lee (b. 1988, New York City) received her MFA from the California College of the Arts in 2017. Her work is presently on view at the 2024 Whitney Biennial, Even Better than the Real Thing, curated by Chrissie Iles and Meg Onli. She has had solo exhibitions at Light Work, New York; the Contemporary Art Gallery of Vancouver; Bibeau Krueger, New York; Et al, San Francisco; and Interface, Oakland. Her work has been exhibited at the Museum of Modern Art, New York; New Orleans Museum of Art; Museum of Fine Arts Houston; The Princeton University Art Museum; Barbican Centre, London; Aperture Foundation, New York; International Center of Photography, New York; Tara Downs, New York; and Yancey Richardson, New York; and LAND AND SEA, Oakland.