lumber room

Full Body Parentheses

April 13th - July 13th, 2024

The lumber room presents Full Body Parentheses, a mid-career survey of Math Bass’s sculptural works, accompanied by the artist’s site-specific murals and a selection of small paintings. Best known for their paintings, which iterate on a lexicon of symbols to create a unique language, Bass’s sculptures in Full Body Parentheses animate and complicate those more familiar, flattened forms, creating a resonant, playful world of iconic objects.

Bass has been interested in the intersection between performance and sculpture since they began making sculptures to appear as characters in videos as a student. Seriality, the repetition of forms, and sculpture as character remain crucial themes in their practice.

In this vein of performance, the exhibition begins in a double curtain room with a roving, pre-programmed spotlight. The light searching for the moment before the show begins is a classic performative moment. The stairway that leads up from that room to the main gallery has a tinted skylight that casts a light over the whole space, creating an ephemeral entryway to the show.

The body of work in Full Body Parentheses started over a decade ago with a set of costumes in performances that referenced houses being tented for termites in Los Angeles. The artist saw a mansion being tented as a spectacle of condemnation that seemed to negate the location of the house – to remove its houseness from the landscape. What would happen if there was a body inside, they wondered? The body became a location that could be deleted, disappear from the world, by using this termite tent form. The original video from that first work will be screened in Full Body Parentheses, with a score that uses all impact noises from instruments: a cinder block being smashed on piano keys, a single guitar string strumming, the sound of a sewing machine, a door closing slowly. These are strung together to create a soundtrack, even though the individual elements are not melodic, and the sound functions as one of the directors of the video, suggesting the players’ movements.

The body takes on another role in the ladders and concrete pants and shorts (“Brutal Set”) that comprised the set pieces for a performance originally staged at the Hammer. While the ladder moved bodies through space easily, the concrete jeans were so heavy they seemed to impede motion all together. Inspired by wet concrete spotted by the side of the road in Los Angeles, still in the shape of its absent bag, the artist thought about turning something soft and empty into something hard and solid. Jeans don’t have much of a form until you put them on. The standard staple of the American wardrobe, emptied of meaning and filled with something else.

Next came the metal forms: taking a piece of material and removing a few pieces from it to suggest a body, such as the work “And Its Shadow,” which almost resembles a pair overalls. “Yellow Rocking Chair,” by contrast, takes a familiar form and activates it with thrilling lightness in the space.

“Pot Tower” emerged from a whole body of work where pots played different roles: as support, as ornament, stacked on top of each other unfused. Then for the next iteration, Bass wanted to make a photoshop-like gesture and erase the seams among the pots. The hedge behind it is another ambiguously tarped object, a distressed big green thing, also sack-like. In the case of another work, “Crowd Rehearsal,” nicknamed Flayed Orca, notched and painted canvas loose over a foam mat is meant to look like someone reclining on their side.

Rather more iconic than ambiguous, the “Scottie Dogs” were inspired by Bass’s aunt’s fourth grade ceramic project, from a 1960s craft kit for kids. Bass drew the dog from memory, then had it turned into a sculpture, rendering the memory 3D once again. Americana (and nostalgia) also factor in the apple sculpture, “Elizabeth II,” which stands for both original sin and the famous one on the teacher’s desk. Bass’s mother was a teacher, and apple forms were common in their childhood home, a motif of growing up. There is something so perfect about an apple.

The titular work of the show, “Full Body Parentheses,” also riffs on Americana, remaking a form from a lamp from a thrift store that appeared to be handmade, from the 60s or 70s. Scaling it into something more like the size of a body and less of a domestic object, the form becomes punctuation for the paintings and the body in the gallery. This work frames objects in the room, acts as a threshold, as tall as a standard doorway, at once in proportion with a home and unfamiliar.

Among these brackets and the charged objects in this show – alternately iconic and ambiguous – the body is activated, appears and disappears in space.

– Emily Segal

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Math Bass (b. 1981, New York, NY) is an interdisciplinary artist whose practice spans painting, performance, sculpture, murals, and video. They received a BA from Hampshire College and an MFA from the University of California, Los Angeles. Recent solo exhibitions include: Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, New York (2023) the Henry Art Gallery, University of Washington, Seattle (2021-2022); Tanya Leighton, Berlin (2022); Vielmetter Los Angeles (2020); Various Small Fires, Seoul (2019-2020); Hammer Museum, Los Angeles (2018); Mary Boone Gallery, New York (2018); The Jewish Museum, New York (2017); Yuz Museum, Shanghai (2017); and MoMA PS1, New York (2015). Bass has also participated in selected group exhibitions at David Zwirner Gallery, NY (2022); Martos Gallery, New York (2019); Fredericks & Freiser, New York (2019); Gordon Robichaux, New York (2018); and the Made in L.A. Biennial at the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, (2012). A forthcoming solo exhibition at Tanya Bonakdar Gallery, NYC is schedule for September 2023. Their work is included in the permanent collections of the Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles, CA; the Museum of Contemporary Art San Diego, CA; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, CA; the Hammer Museum, Los Angeles, CA; Minneapolis Institute of Art, MN; and the Yuz Museum, Shanghai, China.

Protracted Blue, 2024, fabric, spotlight
Protracted Blue, 2024, fabric, spotlight
Protracted Blue, 2024, fabric, spotlight
Full Body Parentheses, 2024; Installation view, lumber room
Ladder, 2014, wood, black stain
Ladder, 2014, wood, black stain
Clouds, 2024, oil on linen
Full Body Parentheses, 2024; Installation view, lumber room
Full Body Parentheses, 2024; Installation view, lumber room
Scotty (small), Scotty (large), 2019, aluminum and automotive paint; Courtesy of the Artist and The Kurtzman Family
Full Body Parentheses, 2024, foam, fiberglass, burlap, concrete
And Its Shadow, 2014, steel
Full Body Parentheses, (detail), 2024; Installation view, lumber room
Scotty (small), Scotty (large), (detail), 2019, aluminum and automotive paint; Courtesy of the Artist and The Kurtzman Family
Full Body Parentheses, (detail), 2024, foam, fiberglass, burlap, concrete
Apple, 2024, ceramic, acrylic based guache, wood
Apple,(detail), 2024, ceramic, acrylic based guache, wood
Full Body Parentheses, 2024; Installation view, lumber room
Crowd Rehearsal, 2017, stained wood, canvas, and latex paint; Courtesy of the Artist and private collection, Jack Shainman Gallery, New York
Full Body Parentheses, 2024; Installation view, lumber room
Body No Body, Body, (detail), 2018, canvas, latex paint
Full Body Parentheses, 2024; Installation view, lumber room
Crowd Rehearsal, 2017, canvas, latex paint, foam, cotton batting
Pot Tower, 2024, terra cotta pots, joint compound, construction adhesive, latex paint;Hedge, 2013, canvas, latex paint
Pot Tower (detail), 2024, terra cotta pots, joint compound, construction adhesive, latex paint
Full Body Parentheses, 2024; Installation view, lumber room
Yellow Rocking Chair, 2016, powder coated steel
Full Body Parentheses, (detail) 2024; Installation view, lumber room
Untitled (Brutal Set), 2015, concrete; Courtesy of the Artist and the Miller Meigs Collection; Brutal Set, 2012, concrete
Untitled (Brutal Set), 2015, concrete; Courtesy of the Artist and the Miller Meigs Collection; Brutal Set, 2012, concrete
Full Body Parentheses, (detail), 2024; Installation view, lumber room
Sound Towers, 2018, plywood, latex paint
Full Body Parentheses, 2024; Installation view, lumber room
Moon Bone, 2024, oil on linen
Twins, 2024, oil on linen
Pierced Tunnel, 2024, oil on linen
Kiss, 2024, oil on linen
Full Body Parentheses, (detail), 2024; Installation view, lumber room
Bichon, 2024, oil on linen
Speak, 2024, oil on linen
Tent Test, 2011, digital film, 3:33 min. (total run time)
Tent Test, 2011, digital film, 3:33 min. (total run time)
Tent Test, 2011, digital film, 3:33 min. (total run time)