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Arthur Jafa's Radical Theory of Readymade Art

5/28/202647 min

Arthur Jafa is probably the most revered artist of the last decade. Born in 1960, in Tupelo, Mississippi, he came up through the world of cinema. But Jafa also found his way into the art world with his difficult video work and strange objects. In art, his reputation went viral in 2016 with the video, Love Is the Message, the Message Is Death. It is a collage of found footage from social media that included police violence against Black people and also moments of viral celebration and joy. It was both experimental and accessible, and drew huge crowds when it was first shown at Gavin Brown’s Enterprise in New York. A follow-up film, called The White Album, won the Golden Lion for Best Artist as part of the main show of the Venice Biennale back in 2019. And this month, Jafa is back in Venice, this time in a two-person show called “Helter Skelter,” curated by Nancy Spector, pairing him with the famous artist Richard Prince, also known for using found and appropriated imagery to disorienting effect. That show opened alongside the Venice Biennale at the Prada Foundation, and was one of the few things during the opening weekend that everyone could agree was a must-see event. Jafa has also curated a show currently on view at the Museum of Modern Art, called “Less Is Morbid,” a deliberately packed display of his favorite art. He is also one of the winners of this year’s Art Basel Award, to be honored at that fair. In the middle of all this intense activity, Jafa agreed to talk to Artnet's Ben Davis about his art, his view of art history, and what comes next.

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First 90 seconds
  1. Arthur Jafa· Guest0:00

    [instrumental music] It's about what you appropriate and what you do with it, how you structure it. How you, like the urinal, can take a thing that's fixed and turn it into something else just by way of a kind of contextual transposition or dissonance, let's say.

  2. Ben Davis· Host0:16

    [instrumental music] I'm Ben Davis, and this is The Art Angle, a podcast from Artnet News. [instrumental music] Arthur Jafa is probably the most revered artist of the last decade. Born in 1960 in Tupelo, Mississippi, he came up through the world of cinema. But Jafa also found his way into the art world with his difficult video work and strange objects. In art, his reputation went vertical in 2016 with the video Love is the Message, The Message is Death. It is a collage of found footage from social media that included police violence against Black people, and also moments of viral celebration and joy. It was both experimental and accessible, and drew huge crowds when it was first shown at Gavin Brown's Enterprise in New York. A follow-up film called The White Album won the Golden Lion for Best Artist as part of the main show of the Venice Biennale back in 2019. And this month, Jafa is back in Venice, this time in a two-person show called Helter Skelter, curated by Nancy Spector and pairing him with the

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