Art review: Rashid Johnson: A Poem for Deep Thinkers

Living plants are hung at the Guggenheim in New York City through Jan. 18 as part of Johnson's installation

Plants hang in mid-air at the 'A Poem for Deep Thinkers' exhibit in New York
Rashid Johnson's works incorporate "viscerally engaging" materials
(Image credit: Liao Pan / China News Service / VCG via Getty Images)

A "quietly joyous" sight currently greets visitors to the Guggenheim when they look up into Frank Lloyd Wright's famous spiraling rotunda, said Holland Cotter in The New York Times. Illinois-born artist Rashid Johnson has hung living plants from the circular skylight far above, putting the architecture in dialogue with a plant-strewn installation he placed at the top of the spiraling ramp to crown his current mid-career retrospective. But the walk up to that level "brings many changes of mood," because Johnson, 48, works in many media and modes, and "creating an art that offers multiple-choice responses is pretty clearly what he's after." Identified as part of a "post-Black" generation of artists who play with signifiers of Black identity, Johnson first became known for photographs like the pair of large heroic portraits of homeless Black men on display here. From there, he's navigated "a slip-slide between serious and comical" that adds to his work's richness.

"When he hits the mark, you feel the presence of an artist granting himself full scope to ask deep questions," said Sebastian Smee in The Washington Post. "His best works are richly imagined" and incorporate "viscerally engaging" materials. He's "at his best when using crumbly shea butter and glossy black soap on mounted wall pieces" because those common grooming products "speak to self-care as a response to anxiety and even brokenness." But "something about this survey put me in a bad mood," because Johnson seems to be using the freedom he's been granted by the art world to dabble in media, such as painting, that he's not very good at. "Mired in academic thinking," his weakest work is both "too esoteric and too casual." Consider Homage to Chinua Achebe IV (Fela Kuti' Zombie'), a 2004 assemblage that consists of two wooden sleds, one broken in half, and ostensibly references artists Marcel Duchamp and Joseph Beuys, novelist Chinua Achebe, musician Fela Kuti, and Kuti's murdered activist mother. "Can these two sleds carry all that meaning? The answer is no."

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