Kahlil Robert Irving at MoMA – The Museum of Trendy Artwork

For his solo exhibition right here, Kahlil Robert Irving has frozen the act of browsing the web and transposed it into wallpaper that covers a complete gallery on the museum’s first flooring. Bringing to thoughts photos of laptop computer screens crowded with infinite home windows and tabs, Irving immerses us within the litter and clamor of on-line life by way of memes, social media screenshots, e-newspaper headlines, and extra. On a variety of partitions, this seemingly countless universe of indicators is ready in opposition to a background of clouds, as if this digital realm had been heaven.
Irving’s frenetic tapestry is particularly involved with intervening on the aporia of Black life on the web, the place Black tradition is each spectacularized but secret, and the place Black sociality is hyper-visible however opaque, given the idiosyncratic languages and codes that surreptitiously flow into amongst Black web customers. The layers of contradiction that animate Blackness stay with out apology within the tumult of Irving’s set up.
Irving additionally elaborates on these tensions by a juxtaposition of comedy and tragedy: Headlines about anti-Black violence collide with memes sourced from Black Twitter as “weary” face emojis partially obscure footage of an Black man sure with rope and led by the streets of Galveston, Texas, by a pair of cops on horseback—a horrific scene not from the distant previous, however from solely three years in the past. On the gallery flooring, ceramics busy with equally sturdy concatenations of discovered media give these contradictions three-dimensional kind. For instance, in Arches & requirements (Stockley ain’t the one one). Meissen Matter : STL matter, 2018, dainty vintage chinaware is woven into heavy, roughly textured asphalt and different supplies, all of which is coated with advertisements and pictures of demonstrations following the 2017 acquittal of Jason Stockley, the Saint Louis police officer who shot and killed a Black man by the title of Anthony Lamar Smith in 2011.
However inside this bricolage of familiar-yet-overwhelming imagery, Irving leaves discrete traces of his presence that floor the work in a actuality that’s shared, but in addition individually particular. His ceramics bear the bodily imprints of his palms, whereas on the partitions digital screenshots made on Irving’s personal pc reveal a life lived within the type of time stamps, mobile battery statuses, “likes” and different types of social media commentary by the artist. In revealing his personal presence, Irving carves a quiet intimacy out of digital pandemonium.