Opening reception: November 10, 2012, 7:00 – 10:00 p.m.
Conversation with the artist: November 14, 2012, 7:00 p.m.
From November 10 through December 21, 2012.
 
Gates is known for his performances, installations, and urban interventions, which transform spaces, institutions, traditions, and perceptions. His training as an urban planner and sculptor, and subsequent time spent studying clay, has given him keen awareness of the poetics of production and systems of organizing. Playing with these poetic and systematic interests, Gates has assembled gospel choirs, formed temporary unions, and used systems of mass production as a way of underscoring the need that industry has for the body. When Gates is not making art for museums, he is converting abandoned buildings into cultural spaces that allow not only new cultural moments to happen in unexpected places, but raise the expectations of where “place-making” happens and why. The exhibition will also include sculptural and two-dimensional works, created with materials sourced from sites in Chicago and Miami, underscoring Gates’ interest in the po-etics of re-purposed and salvaged materials.
Theaster Gates was born in 1973. He lives and works in Chicago. He has had solo exhibitions at Seattle Art Museum (2011), Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art (2011), Kavi Gupta Gallery, Chicago (2011), Milwaukee Art Museum (2010) and the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago (2009). His work has been shown in group exhibitions at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston (2010) and the Tokoname Museum of Ceramic History, Japan (2005). He also featured in ‘dOCUMENTA 13’, Kassel, Germany (2012), the ‘Armory Show’, New York (2011) and ‘Whitney Biennial’, Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2010). One of his most esteemed projects is ‘Dorchester Projects’ (2006), which is ongoing. For his exhibition My Labor is My Protest (2012), Gates honored his father’s work as a roofer as an alternative form of protest during the American Civil Rights Era by transforming one gallery into a library of race-related literature with over 10,000 books, open to the public at White Cube Gallery in London.
Soul Manufacturing Corporation is a multi-city initiative based in Chicago that works in tandem with the Rebuild Foundation, an urban redevelopment organization dedicated to the creative re-use of buildings and design education throughout communities of color.
Locust Projects
3852 North Miami Avenue
Miami, FL 33127
305.576.8570 
www.locustprojects.org 

 
		
		
		 
		
		
		 
		
		
		 
		
		
		 
		
		
		 
		
		
		
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