This text is a part of Hyperallergic’s 2024 Satisfaction Month collection, that includes interviews with art-world queer and trans elders all through June.
The whole lot I find out about feminist artwork I’ve discovered from Concord Hammond, and for that, I really feel extremely fortunate. As soon as every week I go to her studio in Galisteo, New Mexico, to do mild administrative work. I say “mild” as a result of she is a powerhouse of group, productiveness, and focus; she’d just do fantastic with out me hanging round however welcomes my assist regardless. That very same spirit — a steadiness of rigor and openness — infuses Hammond’s work as a groundbreaking artist, author, and curator who has pioneered progressive, expansive eager about feminist and queer artwork for the reason that early Nineteen Seventies.
She was a co-founder of A.I.R., the primary ladies’s cooperative artwork gallery in New York, in 1972, and co-founder of Heresies: A Feminist Publication on Artwork and Politics, in 1976, co-editing and writing for the journal’s third challenge “Lesbian Artwork and Artists.” In 1978, she curated A Lesbian Present, the primary exhibition of labor by lesbian artists in New York on the artist-run 112 Greene Avenue Workshop. And in 1999, she curated Out West at Plan B Evolving Arts in Santa Fe, a present that has been revisited at the very least partly by the New Mexico Museum of Artwork with a present exhibition of the identical identify that appears on the contributions of homosexual and lesbian artists within the Southwest, 1900 to 1969.
Hammond has printed quite a few articles and essays, at all times by means of a fiercely beneficiant feminist artwork lens. Her e book Wrappings: Essays on Feminism, Artwork and the Martial Arts (TSL Press, 1984) is acknowledged as a foundational textual content; Lesbian Artwork in America: A Up to date Historical past (Rizzoli, 2000) obtained the Lambda Literary Award and stays the first publication on the topic. Nonetheless Harmful! The Concord Hammond Reader, edited by Tirza T. Latimer, is slated for publication by Duke College Press in early 2026.
Now it seems to be just like the mainstream artwork world may lastly be catching up with Hammond, who has been exhibiting for greater than six many years. Through the previous two years, her work has been in additional than 15 exhibitions across the globe, together with The Whitney Biennial 2024; Woven Histories: Textiles and Trendy Abstraction, at the moment on the Nationwide Gallery of Artwork in Washington, DC, then touring to the Nationwide Gallery of Canada, and eventually to MoMA; and Unravel: The Energy and Politics of Textiles in Artwork, which opened on the Barbican in London and touring to the Stedelijk Museum.
What follows is a short interview with Hammond that glimpses her use of supplies and the language of abstraction, and provides her perspective on being a feminist and queer artist immediately.
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Hyperallergic: Has the artwork world felt open to you? Have you ever discovered it accepting?
Concord Hammond: I moved to Manhattan in 1969 through the activism of the anti-war and liberation actions, and got here out in 1973 within the context of the Girls’s Liberation Motion (WLM). The artwork world has at all times been open to homosexual males, however not ladies, be they straight or homosexual. Whereas I’m certain I’ve been discriminated towards for being queer, I’ve been much more discriminated towards as a girl in patriarchal tradition, and that features the artwork world. Stonewall created an area for me, however it was the WLM that was the best affect and offered essentially the most help.
H: Who’re your mentors? Did you’ve got queer mentors?
HH: I didn’t have any household mentors, and girls artists weren’t on the school after I was in faculty. For me, it was extra about being in the appropriate place on the proper time — an experimental and politically aware downtown artwork scene within the early ’70s — and assembly weekly with an artwork CR group to develop and critique work with feminist content material, collective feminist organizing inside the artwork world, and initiating initiatives reminiscent of A.I.R. and Heresies: A Feminist Publication on Artwork and Politics that offered vitality round shared political, artistic, {and professional} targets. Since ladies artists and their work weren’t welcome in museums and galleries within the ’70s, we created our personal venues for visibility. As with all organizing, it was a number of blood, sweat, and tears, however it was additionally exhilarating, and if I dare say so, revolutionary.
H: Who’re your friends? Your cohorts? Do you are feeling linked to approaching queer artists and art work?
HH: Along with my studio follow, I’ve spent many years instructing, lecturing, writing, and curating (all of which I think about to be political work), so my cohorts in crime consist of a giant nationwide (and considerably worldwide), intergenerational community of feminist and queer artists, historians, writers, lecturers, and activists. Aside from what my altering bodily physique tells me, I don’t suppose a lot about age. I’ve at all times had and worth colleagues significantly older and youthful than myself. In fact, these days, virtually everyone seems to be youthful. That’s good—we’d like new voices. It’s nice that ladies and queer artists of my technology are lastly getting consideration for his or her work, however given the large resurgence of right-wing censorship of distinction impacting queer, two-spirit, non-binary, and trans artists, I additionally suppose it’s necessary to prepare and take part in native and regional “queer exhibitions” with rising and upcoming artists, to occupy house, to proceed being seen!
H: How does id issue into your artwork?
HH: Identities and labels may give some info and be useful. They don’t need to be limiting. We will outline and redefine them on our personal phrases.
I’ve two separate our bodies of labor that inform one another. Largely I make massive near-monochrome oil work that incorporate supplies starting from materials, rusted roofing tin, linoleum, latex rubber, burlap espresso sacks, and grommets to “pure” supplies together with straw, leaves, roots, hair, and blood in layers of thick pigment. The supplies and the way in which they’re bodily manipulated and juxtaposed carry content material into the portray subject, what I name “materials engagement” as a method to “social abstraction.” It’s a manner of collaborating within the narrative of modernist portray and on the identical time interrupting and revising that narrative to incorporate voices of distinction—these on the fringes, those that have been marginalized or silenced, to make work about company. Like queer id, summary portray is indeterminate. Most of my work occupies an area between portray and sculpture, what we would name a 3rd or queer house. I’m interested by “edges” and what goes on there. It’s the place I hang around and am most comfy.
I additionally make overtly political work reminiscent of “Talking Braids” (2001–02) or “A Queer Reader” (2003) that deliberately take care of 2SLGBTQIA+ points reminiscent of voice, censorship, and historic erasure. The 2 varieties of work co-exist and affect one another. On occasion they arrive collectively. I’m considering of “What Have You Performed With Our Want?,” a mixed-media set up portray from 1997 that’s at the moment included in Out West: Homosexual and Lesbian Artists within the Southwest 1900 – 1969, or “Voices I” (2023), a current work. Each juxtapose fragments of classic domestic-patterned linoleum with textual content by the French lesbian feminist theorist Monique Wittig to counsel each a bodily and linguistic violence. She writes: “As lesbians we are able to effectively ask heterosexual society: what have you ever achieved with our want? With want itself?” And continues: “If want may liberate itself, it could don’t have anything to do with the preliminary marking of sexes.”
H: What does Satisfaction month imply to you?
HH: June Satisfaction is an event for neighborhood gathering and visibility — for queers to collect collectively. I’ve many fond reminiscences. My first Homosexual Satisfaction March (sure, they have been political marches then, not rainbow parades!) was in 1974 in New York Metropolis. I walked from Christopher Avenue to Central Park with my daughter on my shoulders. She walked once more with me in 1979.
In 2006, Delmas Howe, an artist who additionally lives in New Mexico, and I have been invited to be Co-Grand Marshals of Albuquerque Satisfaction. That’s the primary time I’ve ever heard of visible artists, a lot much less “painters” being requested to guide a Satisfaction parade. I acquired to experience with my girlfriends in a classic convertible and wave “just like the queen.” Delmas was in a truck along with his boys. The parade route began on the College of New Mexico and ended on the State Fairgrounds, the place we queers took over the State Truthful for the day. Delmas and I exhibited our art work (together with “A Queer Reader!”) subsequent to queer pet exhibits and baking contests! Speak about neighborhood!
As you’ll be able to see from the supplies I exploit and the actions I take part in, there’s not a lot separation between my artwork and life.
H: What are you engaged on now?
HH: I’m ending work for Fringe: Concord Hammond Work 2014 – 2024 which is able to open at Web site Santa Fe in late February 2025. The exhibition will give attention to the summary work in dialog with 4 extra overtly political works.