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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: REQUEST FOR COVERAGE

The Taller Boricua is pleased to announce four solo exhibitions by:

Michael Paul Britto: THE COST OF FORGETTING


J Carpenter: LIVE WIRES
Jessica Lagunas: TRACING MEMORIES
Christina Massey: MEAT MARKET

Exhibition Dates: May 28 – July 10, 2010 / Opening: Friday, May 28, 2010 6-9pm
Gallery Hours: Tuesday through Saturday 12-6pm, Thursday 1-7pm, Monday and Sunday Closed
Curated by Marcos Dimas and Christine Licata

As part of our 40th anniversary celebration, the Taller Boricua presents the third and last in our series of multiple, solo
exhibitions by artists who share facets of our mission: art and aesthetics, community, art activism as well as music and
performance.

Michael Paul Britto’s exhibition “The Cost of Forgetting” confronts the issues of racism and identity politics through both
a historical and contemporary lens. His work examines the current manifestations and consequences of the ongoing
inequality in America and the price society pays for its denial. His video “And They Sold Us Like Beasts” is created
from a looped scene of a slave ship crossing the ocean from the film “Roots.” Seen from the inside of the hull looking
out toward the waves, the piece encourages a visceral and immediate sense of empathy and humanity to the logically
incomprehensible atrocities of the past, allowing for honest, open discourse in the present. Although slave ships no
longer exist, the sense of powerlessness and injustice driven by discrimination is still prevalent today. “Who Has the
Power?” consists of a life size Ku Klux Klan robe made from African style textiles accompanied by a video depicting the
transformation. By switching the semantics of the historical language of dominance and oppression, Britto empowers
viewers to see the possibility of change and the transient nature of power and control at its core. "Bottle Blonde #1"
and "Don't drink and...” appropriate recognizable consumable goods to reveal the underlying, self-negating stereotypes
promoted within the racially biased mass media. These deeply ingrained social discourses offer African Americans
distorted white-centric views of idealized beauty and promote detrimental aspirations of negative notoriety verses
positive achievement. Britto engages the viewer in provocative, accessible and insightful dialogues about racial
prejudices as well as the potential to redefine them.

J Carpenter employs traditional lace making techniques combined with unconventional materials to challenge the
preconceived notions and expectations of familiar objects and structures. For her installation “Live Wires” she weaves
a 10’ x 8’ house within the gallery using 1/2” thick nylon construction-work rope as thread. The framework is formed
through bobbin lace techniques that utilize hand held spools to braid and twist the cord. Juxtaposing the delicate nature
of lace and the presumed stability of foundational enclosures, Carpenter reveals the fragility of the seemingly
impenetrable walls we build to both protect and isolate ourselves from one another. The strength of the architecture is
derived from the open, intertwined patterns that bring together contrasting associations of the harmonious warmth of a
home and the confining entrapment of a cage. At once beautiful and alluring, though incapable in terms of offering
shelter, the piece functions as a false promise of protection and sanctuary, instead prompting the viewer to reexamine
the concepts of security, belonging, relationships and community.

Combining multiple, individual bodies of her work, Jessica Lagunas’ exhibition “Tracing Memories” explores the politics
of war, gender, acculturation and memory. For the video-performance “120 Minutes of Silence” Lagunas cuts out the
solid shapes in camouflage fabric for two hours, honoring the 40,000 disappeared victims during the 36-year civil war
in Guatemala. “In Memoriam” consists of a Guatemalan wooden jewelry box containing 572 bullet shells, one for each
of the women murdered there in 2006. Based in the conflicts within her native country, the piece also extends beyond
boundaries, addressing the critical problems of femicide and political violence worldwide. The separate print series, “Ai
Spik Inglish” is inspired by the phonetics and popular phrases in language books. The prints are made from rubber
stamps customized with the Spanish pronunciation for English phrases that are then juxtaposed to create fictional,
short dialogues, visually documenting the process of acculturation for Latino immigrants. Also exhibited are the original
stamps for viewers to create their own discourse. Within the latest incarnation of her site-specific “Drawing of
Man/Drawing of Woman,” Lagunas collaborated with the Taller in conducting an informal perfume survey in El Barrio
and then she used the most prevalent fragrances for each sex to create large-scale drawings. Barely visible to the eye,
the work must be experienced through the viewer’s sense of smell, investigating alternate perceptions of femininity and
masculinity.

In her installation “Meat Market,” Christina Massey deconstructs and repurposes previous series of her own paintings,
literally “butchering” them by cutting and tearing them apart and then rebuilding the pieces into three-dimensional flesh-
like forms. Resembling animal carcasses and hung from chains and meat hooks, her pieces reflect the objectification
and commoditization of art by both the viewer and the art market wherein commercial value competes with aesthetic
experience. Her work also references these effects on artists’ work and their own desire and potential to be
“marketable,” where the gallery world can at times project the superficial value judgments of singles bars, also referred
to as “meat markets” in popular culture. Massey further explores the concepts of both ownership and authorship as her
past works are the medium for future ones, rejecting a linear progression and classification of the traditional definition
of a body of work as well as the finality of the finished object of art. “Meat Market” is in constant flux, suspended
between painting and sculpture, abstraction and representation as well as the literal and conceptual.

ABOUT THE ARTISTS:


Michael Paul Britto is a Brooklyn-based artist who graduated from the City College of New York. Britto’s work ranges
from videos to digital photography, sculpture and performance. Britto has had residencies at the New Museum (New
York), as well as Smack Mellon (New York) and The Marie Walsh Sharpe Foundation (New York). Britto’s work has
been featured in shows at El Museo del Barrio (New York), The Studio Museum in Harlem (New York), The Zacheta
National Gallery (Warsaw), Kentucky Museum of Art and Craft (Louisville) and the Victoria and Albert Museum
(London). Britto has been written about in the New York Times, Art in America, and The Brooklyn Rail.
www.brittofied.com

J Carpenter currently works in New York City. She graduated from Rutgers University (New Jersey) with a degree in
painting in 2002 and taught high school and elementary school art from 2002 to 2008. She has shown throughout New
York and New Jersey including Art Gotham (New York), Manna Fine Arts Exhibition Space (New Jersey), City Hall
(New Jersey) and the Ellarslie Museum (New Jersey). Carpenter was a member of Gaia Studio from 2006 – 2008 and
the Lost Art Lacers Guild of New Jersey from 2008 - 2010. She completed residencies at Gaia Studio (New Jersey)
and SWAP (Supporting Women Artists Project) (Brooklyn) where she also worked as a studio manager. Carpenter has
also been awarded the New Jersey Council on the Arts Fellowship in 2009 and a LMCC Swing Space residency.
www.jcarpenterart.com

Jessica Lagunas is a NY-based Guatemalan artist. She participated in Biennials from El Museo del Barrio, Tirana,
Cuenca, Caribbean, and Guatemala; and has exhibited on group shows in the US, UK, Italy, Spain, Guatemala, and
Venezuela. In 2005-6 she was selected for the AIM program at the Bronx Museum. Her work is included in the
anthology “Imagining Ourselves” from the International Museum of Women in San Francisco. She is a 2008 Fellowship
recipient from the Urban Artist Initiative/NYC, and has received three grants from the Northern Manhattan Arts Alliance.
Recently she was awarded a residency from LMCC’s Swing Space at Governor’s Island. www.jessicalagunas.com

Christina Massey was born and raised in Northern California where she studied painting, printmaking and theater set
design. Her work has shown in multiple venues in the New York metropolitan area such as Chashama, Nurture Art,
The MoCADA and The Micro Museum as well as in galleries in across the country and abroad. She has multiple
publications coming out this year, including work in the New Art Review, Abstractions 2010, an on-air interview with
BTR Radio as a part of their “Art Uncovered” program, and has been featured on the popular blog, ArtInBrooklyn.com.
Massey’s work can be found in multiple private collections, and publicly at the Janet Turner Museum of Art in
California. She currently lives and works in Brooklyn, NY. http://cmasseyart.wordpress.com

For additional information about any of the artists, please contact the Taller Boricua: contact@tallerboricua.org

Taller Boricua / The Puerto Rican Workshop is a 40-year old artist-run nonprofit art gallery and multidisciplinary cultural
space in El Barrio. Our mission is to be a proactive institution for the community in East Harlem by offering programs
that stimulate its social, cultural and economic development through the promotion of the arts.

Taller Boricua Galleries 1680 Lexington Avenue, NYC, N.Y. 10029


t: 212.831.4333 f: 212.831.6274 e: contact@tallerboricua.org www.tallerboricua.org
Directions: 6 Train to 103 Street / Free admission / Center is accessible for individuals with disabilities.

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