May 13 thru June 28, 2024
SPOKE’s Gallery is proud to present Jay Critchley’s first solo exhibition in Boston. Jay is a longtime Provincetown multidisciplinary and performance artist, writer and activist. His show at SPOKE entitled, Democracy of the Land: Patriotism, takes a deep dive into his singular, penetrating work with his historic exploration of the roots of American identity and the occupied landscape and its mythology.
SPOKE, in-conjunction with the exhibition, is hosting a hybrid panel discussion (Zoom & in-person), Democracy of the Land, on May 23rd at 6:30pm. The panelists are artists Jay Critchley (Bio & info below), L’Merchie Frazier (Bio) James Ari Montford (Bio), and Robert Peters (Bio). The panel will be moderated by curator Kathleen Bitetti (Bio).
Critchley’s exhibition critiques poet Robert Frost’s unabashedly Colonialist poem, The Gift Outright: “The land was ours before we were the land’s.” The centerpiece of his solo show is a 10’h x 15’w wall-size American flag, tarred and feathered, lit with white light “stars,” referencing patriotism to embrace and nurture the Land for our mutual survival. Tarring and feathering is a form of public humiliation used to enforce unofficial justice or revenge. It was used in feudal Europe and on the American frontier, mostly as a type of mob vengeance. It is meant to humiliate and severely criticize a person.
“We ask, Who is being tarred and feathered – We the American people? The ecology of the planet?” states the internationally recognized artist. “We need to listen to the Land and let the Land speak, all its disparate elements, the cacophony of our relative’s voices from the microbes to the insects to the four-legged and two legged creatures,” he adds.
With Democracy of the Land: Patriotism the artist returns to his use of an American Flag, first employed in 1989 with Old Glory Condom Corporation, a patriotic safer sex enterprise, and then in 2010 linking globalism, pandemics and environmental disasters with a flag constructed with tie-string surgical masks. The Blessed Virgin Rubber Goddess – Immaculate Protection in 1989 linked HIV with the health of the rainforest’s rubber trees that produce condoms. The artist initially used down feathers to create a walk-in version of the White House, called The Whiteness House – tarred and feathered at the Santa Fe Art Institute in New Mexico in 2017. It was exhibited in Provincetown in 2019.
Drawing on his research and work about American symbolism, mythology, history, settler occupation, Native Nations and ecological concerns, Critchley’s work confronts our torrid and complicated history of what it means to be an American and how we commune together to move forward. It moves beyond farm to table to Land to Land – challenging the corporate supply chain to return to the Land, uncontaminated, what’s taken from the Land.