#Hugh Hayden
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10.05.24 Hugh Hayden at the Nasher Sculpture Center in Dallas, TX
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Hugh Hayden, Hughmans
Lisson Gallery New York space, May 2024
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Photos of Hugh Hayden's Exhibition Home Work, as seen at the Rose Art Museum (Brandeis University), 2024. Throughout this post, text present in the gallery (written by museum curators, not me) is intended in block quotes.
Through his prodigious studio practice, Hugh Hayden (b. 1983, Dallas, TX) has become one of the leading artists of his generation. His meticulously crafted sculptures, hybrid forms, and poignant installations evoke profound reflections on the human condition within a complex, volatile, and often threatening world. hayden combines a probing analysis of serious and often painful topics with humor, visual puns, and wordplay, provoking a unique blend of visceral and critical responses.
I was captivated by Hayden's work from the moment I stepped into the gallery. Really stunning stuff. Names of all pieces in this post (left to right, top to bottom), as well as excerpts from gallery text, can be found below the Read More. I highly encourage you to check it out in more detail!
American Gothic (2024)
Hayden merges two skeletal figures with agricultural and domestic tools, examining aspects pertaining to labor and the dignity of work. The artist deliberately positions himself as part of a genealogy of American artists, referencing Grant Wood's 1930 painting American Gothic and Gordon Parks's 1942 photograph, American Gothic.
Eden (2022)
Eden presents two ribcages locked together in an intimate embrace. Hanging on a clothes rack, the ribcages are meticulously crafted from cedar wood, a material often used where clothes are stored to repel moths. The fact that the skeletal lovers are closeted suggests that this embrace needs to be kept a secret. The title references the bliss associated with the biblical Garden of Eden.
Hangers (2018)
High Cotton (2015-2020)
High Cotton, emulating and arcade claw machine, is clad in lustrous, Chippendale-inspired Honduran mahogany, carved to the recall the eighteenth- and nineteenth-century furnishings of high society. Sharp-edged cotton balls (replacing the game's expected toys) force a player to "pick cotton," a task directly associated with slavery. The work highlights the raw material used to produce the fine cotton clothing found around the world--and once neatly folded inside the mahogany armoires of slave owners.
Fairy Tale (2023)
Fairy Tale features a pair of interlocking Tiffany rings, with HIV-prevention medication replacing the expected diamonds or gems. The title suggests a "happily-ever-after" gay love story for those who once lived in the shadow of AIDS. The word "fairy" in the title, sometimes used as a slur, is here reclaimed with pride.
The Kiss (2020)
In The Kiss, two football helmets are caught together like stags whose horns are locked in battle. Their interlocking forms and the title of the piece suggest a range of relationships, from homosocial camaraderie to same-sex intimacy. Many of Hayden's sports-related sculptures expose the fact that the very devices supposed to protect may also wound. The Kiss recalls the high number of brain injuries suffered by football players.
Positives (2019-2024)
Hedges (2019)
This installation features a model of an archetypal suburban home. Rather than associating the domestic with security, Hayden transforms the familiar abode into an unsettling place where menacing branches sprout from and overpower the structure's walls, window, and roof. Hedges is experienced within a mirrored chamber that situates the viewer amid an endless row of uncanny houses. Hayden often notes that home ownership is considered one of the key goals of achieving the American dream. Yet this path is hardly assured for many people, given the inequities in society and the financial precarity that so many endure. As shown here and throughout the exhibition, Hayden's visceral sculptures reveal the disquieting contradictions of the American dream.
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Hugh Hayden Hug #2, 2022
Yes please.
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For Hugh Haydenâs current exhibition Hughmans at Lisson Gallery, his sculptures remain hidden behind bathroom stall doors. The well-crafted works vary in subject, size, and material, and cover a wide range of social issues. For more information on his thought process and some of the work, Hayden recently discussed the show with Art in America.
From the press release-
Following his solo exhibition in Los Angeles, Hugh Hayden continues his exploration of the prosthetics of power in a new series of works and site-specific installations created for the Lisson Gallery New York space. In Hughmans, Hayden reengages with the concept of the bathroom stall in order to investigate experiences of revelation, intimacy, desire, and sexuality â this time through the lens of the collective experience.
Known for his poignant metaphors and examinations of human existence, Haydenâs work transcends individual experience to probe the collective consciousness. Hughmans maintains his signature use of wood as a primary medium alongside bronze, resin, and silicone, amplifying the depth and texture of his narrative. At the heart of the exhibition lies an ambitious site-specific installation, unraveling the complexities of power dynamics in contemporary society. Hayden transforms mundane elements into profound symbols, inviting viewers to confront their own perceptions and assumptions of daily life.
In the gallery, visitors will find an arrangement of metal bathroom stalls, each concealing an artwork within. This unconventional setup challenges notions of privacy and intimacy, urging viewers to reconsider their relationship with public spaces. Two wooden sculptures embodying the fictional character Pinocchio will be exhibited. Ebanocchio (2024) and Nocecchio (2024) serve as contrasting counterparts, one crafted from ebony and the other from walnut. In the original fairytale, Pinocchioâs name was also derived from his physical, wooden origin, âPinoâ being the Italian term for pine. These works employ Haydenâs recurring conceptual gesture of wood and the intersection of materiality and identity. The artist recently unveiled another sculpture, Geppetto (2023), in his comprehensive exhibition, American Vernacular, at the Laumeier Sculpture Park. Named in reference to Pincocchioâs father, the work serves as an antecedent to the pieces showcased in New York. Like much of Haydenâs ouvre, the fantastical story of the marionette is often attributed as a metaphor for the human condition.
In another stall, the artist will present Harlem (2024), a new ensemble of cast iron melting pots and copper pans â works which serve as a metaphor for the creation of America through cultural diversity. These particular sculptures will depict both facial features and functional musical instruments. This iteration of melting pots, made using sand casting, synthesizes diasporic movement and the African origins of the US. Unlike past presentations of similar works which were hung from the wall and ceiling, these works will be suspended from a New York City subway-style handrail.
This exhibition closes 8/2/24.
#Hugh Hayden#Lisson#Lisson Gallery#NYC Art Shows#Art#Art in America#Art Installation#Art Shows#Bathroom Stalls#Chelsea Art Galleries#Chelsea Art Shows#Mixed Media#Mixed Media Art#Mixed Media Sculpture#New York Art Shows#Sculpture#America Gothic
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- Hugh Hayden âEveâ (2023)
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Hugh Hayden Cable News, 2018 Sculpted post cedar (Juniperus ashei) with mirror and hardware 101 x 31 1/2 x 19 1/2 in
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Installation view of âThe end,â NGV Triennial, Melbourne. Photo by Sean Fennessy.
Hugh Hayden Untangles American Mythology with Overgrown Sculptures and Skewed Installations
Installation view of âThe end,â NGV Triennial, Melbourne. Photo by Sean Fennessy
âHuff and a Puffâ (2023), deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum. Photo by Mel Taing
Installation view of âHugh Hayden: Hughmanâ at Lisson Gallery, Los Angeles.
âBrainwashâ (2023), PVC and nylon bristles, 33 x 26 x 29 inches.
âEveâ (2023), cherry bark and acrylic on resin, black walnut, 25 x 15 x 10 inches.
#hugh hayden#artist#art#sculptor#art installations#sculptures#national gallery of victoria triennial#sean fennessy#photographer#mel taing
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instagram
Hugh Hayden
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DavĂłne Tines was joined by the New Yorker's Henry Alford at the Cooper Hewitt museum in New York City, where the finishing touches were being made to a recreation of his childhood living room in Virginia. You can read it here. Tines put the installation together with artist Hugh Hayden and director Zack Winokur for the exhibition Making HomeâSmithsonian Design Triennial, which opens this weekend and runs to August. More info here.
#davone tines#new yorker#cooper hewitt#smithsonian#nyc#hugh hayden#zack winokur#nonesuch#nonesuch records
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Hugh Hayden, Lisson, bathroom stall exhibition
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Iâm so in love with older men itâs really getting out of hand
#aaron hotchner#hugh jackman#ryan gosling#ryan reynolds#ethan hawke#robert sean leonard#jason gideon#jim hopper#bo burnham#pedro pascal#thomas brodie sangster#dylan o'brien#josh hutcherson#oscar isaac#mike faist#matthew gray gubler#james marriott#jacksepticeye#markiplier#slimecicle#ethan nestor#willne#hugh laurie#tom hiddleston#tom hardy#drew starkey#hayden christensen#james mcavoy#simon pegg#cillian murphy
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the shitty part about having massive crushes on men who are 15+ years older than you is that you want them to date you but if they ever approached you IRL and asked you out, you would be compelled to call the police.
#hugh jackman#callum turner#austin butler#anthony boyle#james mcavoy#ryan reynolds#matthew lillard#jensen ackles#jeffrey dean morgan#jared padalecki#hayden christensen#henry cavill#chris evans#chris pine#benedict cumberbatch#pedro pascal#oscar isaac#sebastian stan#cillian murphy#tom hardy#glen powell#joe manganiello
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