Ceaphas Stubbs: SO CLOSE
Ceaphas Stubbs: SO CLOSE
Pace University Art Gallery
February 11-March 26, 2022
In the works featured in SO CLOSE, Ceaphas Stubbs innovatively marries analog and digital photographic techniques with collage and sculpture to produce imagery that is simultaneously intimate, nostalgic, and Afrofuturistic. His vividly colored, often spatially indeterminate, photographs navigate the innate tension between intimacy and pain, and unpack loss by giving visual language to the persistent tingling, itching, burning, and aching that accompany wanting another person. In Stubbs’ figurative abstraction, the viewer catches elusive glimpses of, but never the whole, a body (or bodies) as it emanates (or explodes) out of the picture plane. This never quite knowing of the other is at the core of Stubbs’ work which plumbs the universal feeling of longing—both initial desire’s anticipation and despair after separation.
Stubbs says his multi-step process “starts by collecting materials, textiles, and found images. I am drawn to materials that are overlooked, discarded, and ordinary.” He then creates deconstructed three-dimensional sculptural collages out of these found materials which include fabric scraps, other people’s photos, screen shots of porn, and wire from the studio floor—thereby unifying disparate imagery and simultaneously illustrating its’ disconnectedness which mirrors the cycle of desire and loss. In the final stage, Stubbs documents his sculptures using commercial table top photography techniques culminating in lush large-scale digital prints which both highlight the glossy façade attractiveness and creates separation from the object (of desire). Stubbs’ laborious method is a performance of sorts in which he goes through the process of searching, seeing, and knowing intimately as he builds and documents his tableaux before ultimately losing the object of his attention when he takes it apart leaving only with the photographic remnant.
Ceaphas Stubbs has shown his work widely, including in exhibitions at FiveMyles Gallery, Brooklyn; The Leslie Lohman Museum of Art, New York; Reginald Ingraham Gallery, Culver City; Czong Institute for Contemporary Art Museum, Gimpo-si; Aljira Center for Contemporary Art, Newark; The Print Center, Philadelphia; and The Center for Photography at Woodstock. His works have been reviewed in The New York Times, Brooklyn Rail, Skowhegan's SPACE/LAUNCH, Expose Magazine, and Agave Magazine. He has also done residencies at Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture, Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning, The Creative Capital Professional Development Program, and Express Newark. Stubbs has taught a range of digital arts, photography, and animation college courses across the East Coast, and is currently a tenure-track professor at Brookdale College in NJ. He has a BA in Visual Arts from Rutgers and an MFA from the University of Pennsylvania where he was the recipient of a Christopher Lyon Memorial Award.
Stubbs says his multi-step process “starts by collecting materials, textiles, and found images. I am drawn to materials that are overlooked, discarded, and ordinary.” He then creates deconstructed three-dimensional sculptural collages out of these found materials which include fabric scraps, other people’s photos, screen shots of porn, and wire from the studio floor—thereby unifying disparate imagery and simultaneously illustrating its’ disconnectedness which mirrors the cycle of desire and loss. In the final stage, Stubbs documents his sculptures using commercial table top photography techniques culminating in lush large-scale digital prints which both highlight the glossy façade attractiveness and creates separation from the object (of desire). Stubbs’ laborious method is a performance of sorts in which he goes through the process of searching, seeing, and knowing intimately as he builds and documents his tableaux before ultimately losing the object of his attention when he takes it apart leaving only with the photographic remnant.
Ceaphas Stubbs has shown his work widely, including in exhibitions at FiveMyles Gallery, Brooklyn; The Leslie Lohman Museum of Art, New York; Reginald Ingraham Gallery, Culver City; Czong Institute for Contemporary Art Museum, Gimpo-si; Aljira Center for Contemporary Art, Newark; The Print Center, Philadelphia; and The Center for Photography at Woodstock. His works have been reviewed in The New York Times, Brooklyn Rail, Skowhegan's SPACE/LAUNCH, Expose Magazine, and Agave Magazine. He has also done residencies at Skowhegan School of Painting & Sculpture, Jamaica Center for Arts and Learning, The Creative Capital Professional Development Program, and Express Newark. Stubbs has taught a range of digital arts, photography, and animation college courses across the East Coast, and is currently a tenure-track professor at Brookdale College in NJ. He has a BA in Visual Arts from Rutgers and an MFA from the University of Pennsylvania where he was the recipient of a Christopher Lyon Memorial Award.
Installation images by Adam Reich