Bradley Ward Field, House

Exhibition

Bradley Ward: Field, House
January 15 - March 3, 2022


Featured Artwork

Louis Buhl & Co. presents a solo exhibition with Houston-based artist Bradley Ward, titled Field, House. Through a multitude of media, Ward explores the modalities and poly-characterization of survival within the Black experience. Emphasizing domains in which rhythm has matriculated through the Black body, often in labor, there is also space for the extraordinary in the confluence of Black leisure. Often using sports and performance to reinforce this median within Black life, Ward focuses on the magic of Black harmony and resonance, creating context for both through portraiture and overlapping figuration respectively.


“And where I lived, it was house, field, field.

Field, field, house

Abandoned house field, field.” 


This lyrical refrain is an excerpt from the song “Fields” by rapper and Detroit native Danny Brown, which served as direct inspiration for the exhibition’s title. The song illustrates the trials and tribulations, as well as the glaring disparities, of a Black male youth in a forgotten part of town who is forced to live and behave a certain way to ensure his survival in American society. While the word “fieldhouse” clearly draws on sports motifs, he inserts a comma to separate the word into two, applying a whole new meaning to the phrase. Field, House speaks to the duality that exists within the Black experience, or the various characters Black individuals embody depending on their environment, whether it be on the field playing baseball or in their home with family; in a professional, predominately white setting, or surrounded by close friends. Through the dense layering of figures and other culturally iconic imagery, Ward approaches the topic of performance with questions about self, identity, and place. 


Ward’s practice is rooted in storytelling and research; all of the figures depicted within the exhibition works are real-life baseball players from different American baseball leagues throughout history that the artist has spent much time studying. In one of the portraits, Ward illustrates professional baseball outfielder Lou Brock, who spent most of his major league career playing for the St. Louis Cardinals. The Missouri state flower is collaged onto the piece to commemorate the player’s recent passing. On another, Ward illustrates the word “Hitsville,” a nickname given to Motown’s first-ever recording studio, across an image of his father’s high school baseball team (Jack Yates high school in Houston, TX). With this, Ward emphasizes the interconnectedness between sports and music within his personal life and Black culture in general. Other musical figures presented in the exhibition include spearheading soul group The Temptations; other baseball teams presented throughout include Major Leagues such as the Los Angeles Angels and the Pittsburgh Pirates, as well as Negro Leagues such as the Homestead Grays and the Hilldale Daisies. For Ward, sports, music, and art are all vehicles through which he has been able to define himself, and the lives and experiences of these Black performers have played an extraordinary role in his continuous journey to self discovery.


Since his time spent studying at Pratt where he received his MFA in 2019, Ward has become heavily influenced by and enamored with Arthur Jafa’s frankness and accuracy in describing what has felt like personal afflictions, only to learn that these feelings are responses to circumstance. Ward specifically references Jafa’s affinity for assemblage and mixed media work; as the artist and cinematographer explains, Black individuals often fixate on material because they once were considered that: raw material. Focusing on the exhibition’s cyanotypes, there is a discernible essence of reverence. However, the process of creating the body of work not only echoes Jafa’s words, but it also refers to the countless slaves, athletes, and Black ancestors that have been lost throughout time. As Ward describes it, “the act of creating a cyanotype is very much akin to the call and response of old hymns that were sung in the fields—often thought of as an act to boost morale, but truthfully, it was a call and response to see who all was still with them, just as the image is contrasting with the chemical solution and ultimately charged getting as (black and) blue as they want. A surface treated with the same hot sun that they toiled in, so it’s only right that I chose to commemorate them on a fan, not only as an act of a reprieve, but to reflect that congregation.”


In addition to Jafa, Toni Morrison has been a critical influence on Ward’s recent work. Over the past years, Ward has spent much time listening to and reading the writing of the Black female novelist, garnering an immense admiration for her efforts in providing representation for girls and boys of color like himself. Citing Morrison’s “Song of Solomon,” Ward’s work is inspired by the finite moments of escape within this grand white narrative that Morrison often speaks about, where Black people can naturally and fully be themselves, whether it be trading colloquialisms, exchanging laughs, or simply sharing stillness. Ignited by the literature, Ward thinks back to the first time he felt this described sensation of safety, trust, and mutual understanding: “for me it was playing youth baseball and having another black kid on the team. Being in the outfield together, going to the concessions afterwards just feeling a level of freedom I didn’t have unless I was around family, school or church. My social motor skills were so tuned to being a certain version of myself, but that was unlocked when I saw myself in someone else.” 

For Ward, it is important to seek out these moments of escape, for they offer a reintroduction to previous ideas and familiar undertakings that, with amassed experience overtime, can be viewed with a fresh perspective. Compiling images of figures, animated characters, text and more, the intricate works of art featured in Field/House conflate Black expressionism and performance, highlighting the impact that can occur when individuals of the Black community come together. 


Bradley Ward: Field, House is on view from January 15 through March 3, 2022.

 
 

Featured Artwork

INQUIRE ON AVAILABLE WORKS

Bradley Ward — Relacing the Middle Passage

Forton casting

6h x 10.5w x 6.5d

Bradley Ward — Lead-off Men

Pastel, ink and gouache on paper. Framed in white.

Artwork Dimensions: 40h x 60w in

Framed Dimensions: 46h x 67w in

Bradley Ward — Blue Magic

Pastel, conte, charcoal, gouache, dye and ink on paper. Framed in white.

Artwork Dimensions: 43h x 30w in

Framed Dimensions: 50h x 37w in

 

Bradley Ward — Boogie Men

Tapestry Edition
Edition of 8 + 2 APs

54h x 40w in

Bradley Ward — Hitsville

Pastel, ink and gouache on paper. Framed in white.
Diptych

Artwork Dimensions: 11h x 8.5w in ea.

Framed Dimensions: 15h x 12.5w in ea.

Bradley Ward — State Flower

Pastel, ink and gouache on paper. Framed in white.

Artwork Dimensions: 11h x 8.5w in

Framed Dimensions: 15h x 12.5w in

 

Bradley Ward — Postmark 1

Pastel, ink and gouache on paper.
Framed in white.

Artwork Dimensions: 11h x 8.5w in

Framed Dimensions: 15h x 12.5w in

Bradley Ward — Postmark 2

Pastel, ink and gouache on paper.

Framed in white.

Artwork Dimensions: 11h x 8.5w in

Framed Dimensions: 15h x 12.5w in

Bradley Ward — Postmark 3

Pastel, ink and gouache on paper.

Framed in white.

Artwork Dimensions: 11h x 8.5w in

Framed Dimensions: 15h x 12.5w in

 

Bradley Ward — Postmark 4

Pastel, ink and gouache on paper. Framed in white.

Artwork Dimensions: 11h x 8.5w in

Framed Dimensions: 15h x 12.5w in

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 1

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 2

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

 

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 3

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 4

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 5

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

 

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 6

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 7

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 8

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

 

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 9

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 10

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 11

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

 

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 12

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 13

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 14

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in

 

Bradley Ward — Dungeon Family III 15

Cyanotype on paper and pine wood

16.5h x 10w in