Henry Taylor: B Side

Oct 4, 2023–Jan 28, 2024


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Within Taylor's broad range of subjects are works that delve into political and social allegory and current events. In some, he addresses police brutality in ways that can be terrifyingly direct but also tender. Several paintings memorialize young men murdered by the police and reference the US penal system through images of prison walls, guard towers, and citizens with their hands up. In others, he packs images and text into surreal compositions whose elusive meanings comingle reportage, personal memory, and common outrage. Together, these works extend a long tradition of socially charged history paintings. As with Francisco Goya's The Third of May 1808 (1814), which Taylor cites as a precedent, the emotional message is one of horror and grief.

Henry Taylor, "Watch your back", 2013

Three dark skinned figures stand on a grassy lawn in front of the White House. The rightmost figure has their back turned to the audience and turns their head back in a grin. In the center is a nude figure in a crouched position, as if they were seated. The leftmost figure stands with their head turned towards the center, with their mouth open wide. They are wearing a bright white shirt and clutch a nude colored book to their chest.
Three dark skinned figures stand on a grassy lawn in front of the White House. The rightmost figure has their back turned to the audience and turns their head back in a grin. In the center is a nude figure in a crouched position, as if they were seated. The leftmost figure stands with their head turned towards the center, with their mouth open wide. They are wearing a bright white shirt and clutch a nude colored book to their chest.

Henry Taylor, "Watch your back", 2013. Acrylic on canvas, 87 1/2 × 77 1/2 × 2 in. (222.3 × 196.9 × 5.1 cm.). Hammer Museum, Los Angeles. © Henry Taylor. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth. Photography by Sam Kahn


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