Press Release: After the Flood

Nathaniel Price
October 20 – November 28, 2021
Abigail Ogilvy Gallery, Boston, MA

Nathaniel Price, As Building Draw V, 2013. Pencil on paper, 100 x 50 in.

Nathaniel Price, As Building Draw V, 2013. Pencil on paper, 100 x 50 in.

On March 13, 2020 the world as we knew it changed – businesses closed, doors were locked and sheltering in place became the new normal as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic. On that same day, Nathaniel Price had a new exhibition opening at Abigail Ogilvy Gallery in Boston, MA. The installation was impeccable, the show was documented beautifully–but no one would ever experience it in person. The work stayed up in the gallery with the hope to be able to re-open to the public at some juncture. Then, on April 14, 2020, a major water main broke nearby under Harrison Avenue. The street buckled, cars were swallowed, and water flowed throughout the South End neighborhood.  It was as though the floodwaters were a physical manifestation of the fear that had begun to swallow the world.

18 months later, Abigail Ogilvy Gallery proudly presents After the Flood, a solo exhibition of new artworks by Nathaniel Price. The title is both a metaphor for life after the height of the pandemic, and also one that resonates with many of the longstanding themes in Price’s work. The artist employs the human form and common materials, such as plaster, concrete, steel wire, wood, paper, pencil and words, to examine our responses to the many storms of our contemporary condition. Stresses, strains, resistance, melancholy, fortitude, echoes of the pandemic, climate catastrophe, and ordinary challenges of a middle-aged life are woven into the artworks on view.   

The works are informed by a pursuit of meaning through intellectual and emotional observations that balance themes in psychology, medicine and family dynamics and have been developed over three decades of work that acknowledge the storm that has come while facing the future with a quiet strength and a grey glow.

Nathaniel Price’s statement is oblique but poetically revealing:

A psychologist once said to a troubled child, “Which would you rather do: come to the office, sit down, and talk about yourself and your difficulties, or, come to the office and build things out of matches and Popsicle sticks and set them on fire?”

Included in the show is a series of four meticulously rendered, large format, graphite on paper As Built Drawings. The drawings have previously been seen in San Francisco and at the David J. Sencer CDC Museum in association with the Smithsonian Institution. For each drawing in this series, Price formed a life-size silhouette with thousands of hand-drawn anatomical terms that are astonishingly placed in their correct locations throughout the body. Then, through the series, the outlines of the form fizzle, dissolve, and ultimately invert as the words are replaced with descriptions of processes that disturb the body with the inner form hollowed out altogether. Each drawing takes approximately six months to complete over hundreds of hours. Greg Flood of the San Francisco Examiner noted that “the potent mixture of visual beauty and dark subject matter combine in these drawings to stunning effect.”

Nathaniel Price, Still III, 2020. Resin, pigment, steel wire. 30H x 28W x 96L in.

Nathaniel Price, Still III, 2020. Resin, pigment, steel wire. 30H x 28W x 96L in.
Photo by Julia Featheringill Photography

The pairing of similar forms is a theme that threads through After the Flood as with  Noise III & IV: two life-size forms, shown for the first time, that are wrapped in materials that both define and contain. In one, Price has written thousands of spelling words by hand over several years, creating a grey shroud over the head and torso. The piece underscores Price’s interest in the limitations of words and language as tools to understand the world and ourselves. The second figure, cast from the same mold, positioned in ‘conversation’ with the first is almost caged in a network of unpainted wood, purchased from the local hardware store and crudely screwed together. It is a figure boarded up like a house before a hurricane comes through town.

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Nathaniel Price, Noise VI (detail). 2009-2021. 72 x 20 x 15 in.

Nathaniel Price was born in New York City in 1972. The landscape painter Stanley Lewis was a family friend and an influential figure, cultivating Price’s early interest in drawing and looking with intention. Price graduated from both Wesleyan University (B.A) and the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland (M.D). He has had full scholarship residencies at the Chautauqua Institute, the Vermont Studio Center and the de Young museum in San Francisco. In 2009, he moved his studio from San Francisco to Somerville. His works are in the Priztker family collection, the NYU collection, and the di Rosa Center for Contemporary Art in California. He has been written about in the San Francisco Guardian, The San Francisco Examiner, ARTWEEK, SFWeekly, The San Francisco Chronicle and Art New England. Nathaniel also works as a primary care physician. He teaches at MIT and Harvard medical school where he is an assistant professor. He lives with his wife, Suzanne, and children Abigail, Oliver and Owen in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Nathaniel Price is represented by Abigail Ogilvy Gallery in Boston, MA.

Image courtesy of Julia Featheringill Photography

Artist Spotlight: Marlon Forrester

Image courtesy of Marlon Forrester

Abigail Ogilvy Gallery is proud to represent the artwork of Marlon Forrester, an artist, educator, and athlete working in Boston, MA. Forrester’s work centers primarily on the corporate use of the black body, or the body as a logo. We recently chatted with Forrester about his work, his life, and his influences:

Abigail Ogilvy Gallery: How were you introduced to the arts, and when did you know you wanted to pursue it?

Marlon Forrester: I grew up watching family members take part in constructing sculptures/floats and performing in different costumes for Carnival. There was no real separation between art and culture while growing up as a youth. I come from a rich cultural background in which five different ethnic groups; Black, Indian, Amerindia, European and Chinese exist in Guyanese culture. It is indeed a melting pot for both race and religion.

AOG: What, to you, is the most important part of your practice?

MF: The most important part of my practice is my exploration of concepts related to the black male body and basketball through performance, painting, drawing, sculpture, large scale installations, and video. Transformation and ritual is the foundation element.

AOG: You were a professor at the School of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston. How has your work as an educator informed your studio practice?

Image Courtesy of Marlon Forrester

MF: I worked previously as a professor at SMFA but currently teach as a graduate adjunct instructor at MCA. While teaching at SMFA I taught watercolor and paper, essentially a mixed media class that explored the additive and reductive properties of water. The material application of paint is an emotional space for transformation through mark making.

AOG: In your “Passing Series,” a performance based body of work, you lie prone in public places, tossing a basketball in the air. Can you speak a bit about the series, as well as the way the public in those spaces reacted while you were passing?

MF: In the "Passing Series" the audience responded to my performance in public spaces with a certain sense of excitement, engagement, and curiosity. Some of the viewers attempted to and wanted to interact with me throughout the performance by either pretending to reach for the basketball or walking in close proximity to my body. The "Passing Series" remains a celebration of the slave passage in which slaves were brought from Africa to the Americas.

AOG: You’ve mentioned the importance of self care in your studio practice. What is self care for you, and what does it do for your work as a whole?

MF: Self care is essential to all human beings and within the context of my studio practice it is the ability to remain unrestrained, untethered, released from the formal constructs that inhibit compositionally and materially play. Painting with both hands, splattering paint, spraying paint on to surfaces, painting upside down or from a state of imbalance serves to contextualize and parenthetically flatten out space in my work.

AOG: What was a moment that really stuck out to you in your career, and why was it important to you as an artist?

Image courtesy of Marlon Forrester

MF: My entrance into Yale as a graduate student for Painting/Printmaking radically shifted my perspective on art making. Color theory, critical and theoretical spaces for thinking and art production moved into the forefront of my thinking. Performance which has always been an innate aspect of my identity became an acceptable tool that I could incorporate into my practice. I think having Magdalena Campos Pons as a mentor. Other instructors such as Peter Halley, Robert Storr, and Huma Bhaba, Mickalene Thomas and other amazing artists also elevated how I thought about art not just as passion but as a commodity connected to the art market.

AOG: Can you tell us a bit more about yourself outside of your work?

MF: I'm married, have two beautiful children, write poetry, freestyle, still shoot hoops, love chess and frequently find that mentorship through teaching is also a driving passion of mine.

AOG: Any advice for the next generation of artists?

MF: My advice to the next generation of artists is quite simple, "Be the change that you want to see.” I think, essentially give yourself the space to believe that your reality and future can be formed by your dedication to your dream. Each mark, each cut, each thought buildings on top of another and is of great importance so use them wisely before someone else does.

Abigail Ogilvy Gallery looks forward to hosting our inaugural solo exhibition with Marlon Forrester in September of 2021.