Kevin Beasley
Kevin Beasley’s reconstruction of a roadside barrier is made out of plywood and paint. Normally placed along the road’s edge to deflect traffic and minimise vehicle damage, concrete barriers are intended to direct as much as protect. Beasley’s barriers similarly operate as delineations, marking the positions of borders and boundaries, but lack weight and stability. “They can break up land. They break up trajectories,” says the artist of his subject. “They become separations; become, in some way, a kind of fencing, or even protection.” Beasley produced these reconstructions while in residence at A4 Arts Foundation in 2020. While their concrete counterparts occur globally, they are particularly marked in Cape Town - where space, land and access remain as contentious as ever. By reproducing the immoveable as moveable, Beasley questions what it means to barricade, asking after why boundaries are drawn, and whom they are intended to protect.
b.1985, Lynchburg
Kevin Beasley is preoccupied, above all, with provenance, with the inheritance of found objects, scenes and sounds. Caught between the legible and the obscure, his work blurs the divide between objecthood and personhood, gestures always to the trace of the body, and asks what cultural fragments might suggest about lives and living. His conceptual and material fulcrum is cotton, the history of cotton and everything it has come to represent in black American culture as a symbol of labour and oppression. “Cotton, it takes me everywhere,” Beasley says. “Politics, social relationships you have, you think about economics…reparations. It all just unfolds.” That his home state of Virginia was built on cotton and slave labour, and that the plant continues to grow on his family farm, invites a fraught familiarity into his work. Working with the social fabric of clothing, Beasley explores not only the past but aspirations for the future as reflected in society’s objects.
Beasley was artist in residence at A4 Arts Foundation in January 2020. During his time at the foundation, he transformed the Gallery into a studio and produced an exhibition on-site, without a clear discernible image (February 6–April 30, 2020).