Reyes Projects is pleased to announce a solo exhibition by Brooklyn-based artist and Detroit native, LaKela Brown. The exhibition opens on Saturday, June 23, 2018 from 6-8pm. Echoing the aesthetics of ancient Egyptian and Greco-Roman artifacts, Brown presents her largest works in her series of plaster reliefs. These sculptures aim to preserve artifacts of the 1990s hip-hop era frequently attributed to African-American culture.
The works in the show act as a sartorial diary from Brown's personal archives. The status symbols of her childhood-door-knocker earrings, rope chain necklaces, and gold-capped teeth-function here as semi-abstractions that are both playful and meditative. The use-value of these objects has been eliminated in favor of their value as time capsules of another era. The objects memorialize the aspirations of wealth in American hip-hop culture as an aesthetic phenomenon with important visual manifestations. Brown seeks to investigate the fleeting nature of the material and social currency as well as the aesthetics of status. At the heart of this show, is an artist problematizing societal norms that frame taste and wealth as adichotomy. By framing material signifiers from the hip-hop community as ancient artifacts worthy of preservation in a museum, the show takes a political stance.Videos