Graham Goddard

Graham Goddard

Graham Goddard in Hollywood, California (2015)
Born (1982-04-12) 12 April 1982
Republic of Trinidad and Tobago
Nationality Trinidadian American
Education University of Southern California
Known for Conceptual art, installation art, painting
Notable work Paradigm, AllPublicArt.com

Graham Goddard (born April 12, 1982) is a Trinidadian American artist known for exploring creativity through various artistic mediums including painting, music, site-specific installations and mixed media. Goddard's work has been exhibited at the Skirball Museum, the California African American Museum and numerous art galleries in the United States and abroad.[1]

Graham Goddard is the founder of All Public Art, a social media mobile app and website for artists and art enthusiasts that assists in the discovery of artwork in public spaces around the world. All Public Art also provides a photo-sharing and e-commerce platform for public artists, street artists, businesses, and art organizations to post the exact location of their artworks and sell or purchase art related items. [2] The directory is operated through AllPublicArt.com and its mobile application is available on the Google Play Store for Android devices and on the Apple App Store for iOS mobile devices.[3]

Life and career

Early life

Graham Goddard was born in Port of Spain, Trinidad.[4] In 1989, the Goddards moved from Woodbrook, Trinidad, to Spring Valley, New York.[5] As a child Goddard received training in watercolor painting from Rockland Center for the Arts and had his first solo exhibition in 1992 at the age of 10 at the Filkenstein Gallery in New York.[6] As a child Goddard won numerous art contests including Coca Cola's national art competition in 1995.[7] In 1995 Graham Goddard was the youngest artist selected to attend the prestigious New York State Summer School of the Arts (NYSSSA) in Cazenovia, New York. Goddard attended Spring Valley High School, and painted a mural in the school's main hallway entitled "Land of the Tiger"; the painting was filled with hidden imagery inspired by artist Bev Doolittle.

Graham Goddard studied Fine Arts at the University of Southern California (USC) (Class of 2004, BFA). At USC Goddard explored inverted imagery and developed the Rotating Canvas. Goddard's Rotating Canvas allows the viewer to turn a painting 360 degrees, exposing inverted images within his work. He first introduced the concept in the exhibition "Flip" at the Helen Lindhurst Fine Arts Gallery in 2004.[8]

Early work

In 2005 Goddard investigated the ideas of family legacy and artist exploitation through inverted imagery and abstract expressionist paintings. During this period Goddard exhibited at numerous galleries and venues including Feinstein Art Gallery, JAMCAAR and the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago Consulate of New York.[9] In 2007 Goddard teamed up with legendary fashion designer Karl Kani to develop a high-end clothing line that fused art and fashion.[10]

In 2008, Goddard's miniature painting series was exhibited at Sargent's Fine Art in Maui, Hawaii. Goddard also started exploring spirituality in his paintings and included references to the Bible in watercolor paintings such as "Almost Time," which explored his interest in faith and included his feelings of displacement as a Trinidadian in the United States. Goddard's collectors during this period included singer and actress Vanessa Williams, actress Regina King, actress Gabrielle Union, boxing champion Laila Ali and actress Ana Ortiz.[11]

Museum Exhibitions

"Inside My Head"- California African American Museum

In May 2009 Graham Goddard was invited to exhibit in the California African American Museum's exhibition, "Inside My Head: Intuitive Artists of African Descent," curated by Mar Hollingsworth.[12] The exhibition showcased works by 32 contemporary artists of African descent who have developed a mature style in an intuitive manner.[13] The exhibition explored pure artistic creativity and validated the connection to ethnic-specific traditions and ways of doing.[14] Goddard exhibited the inverted watercolor and acrylic paintings "Legacy" and "God's Speed." The exhibit also featured Goddard's works "In the Smallest Places", "On the Precipice of Faith," and "Word Travels". The works incorporated Goddard's West Indian heritage and addressed America's struggle with spirituality.[15] Notable artists also in the exhibition included Noah Purifoy, Maime Hansberry, Toni Scott, Malik Seneferu, Michael Massenburg and Timothy Washington.[16]

"An Idea Called Tomorrow"- The Skirball Museum & California African American Museum

"An Idea Called Tomorrow" (November 19, 2009 - May 8, 2010) was a historical collaborative partnership between the California African American Museum (CAAM) and the Skirball Museum.[17] Co-conceived by CAAM and the Skirball, the exhibition marked the first time in history that the institutions collaborated.[18] With the goal of inspiring visitors to reflect upon the active role we must all play in bringing about a more just, equitable, and peaceful future, "An Idea Called Tomorrow" showcased new works by fifteen contemporary artists that imagine what a civil future looks like.[19] The participating artists’ ethnicities and backgrounds were as diverse as their presentations, which addressed a broad range of social justice issues of both regional and global relevance, such as environmental sustainability, shelter for all, human equity, equal access and respect, healthy living, reconciliation and forgiveness, and cooperation and peace.[20]

Graham Goddard speaking at the Skirball Museum.

Graham Goddard was invited to exhibit his 50 foot site-specific installation "Paradigm" in front of the museum.[21] Paradigm is a minimalist site-specific installation designed to expose the pollution of an environment. The installation of "Paradigm" marked the first time in history that the museum officially exhibited an artists work in front of the institution. Artist Charles Dickson was also invited to install his sculpture, "Wishing on a Star," on the East side of the museum as part of the exhibition. Other notable artists that participated in the exhibition included Joyce Dallal, John Outerbridge, Dominique Moody, John Halaka, Karen Seneferu, Jane Castillo and Kim Abeles.[22]

At the Skirball Museum's "An Idea Called Tomorrow II," (November 19, 2009 - March 7, 2010) Graham Goddard exhibited the conceptual plans and a maquette of "Paradigm."[23] Graham Goddard is the first Trinidadian in history to exhibit at the Skirball Museum. The exhibition received over 100,000 visitors while it was open. Inspired by land artists such as Robert Smithson, Andy Goldsworthy and Christo and Jeanne Claude, Graham Goddard displayed blueprints designed to instruct the viewer how to build "Paradigm" for themselves, suggesting that anyone could create what Goddard created and contribute to constructive ecological action to renew the environment.

"Paradigm" - site-specific installation

Paradigm in the San Gabriel Mountains, California, 2009.

"Paradigm" is part of a series of land artworks by Graham Goddard designed to investigate their surrounding environments as objects consisting of a process of ongoing relationships between man and nature while addressing our ecological responsibility towards a healthy environment tomorrow.[24] Graham Goddard places “Paradigm” in multiple locations that are at risk and affected by pollution, such as mountains, deserts and watersheds. For an "Idea Called Tomorrow" at the Skirball Museum and the California African American Museum, Goddard proposed the installation of “Paradigm” in the Ballona Creek, a toxic watershed in Culver City, California.[25] “Paradigm” aspires to ensure that sites such as Ballona Creek are no longer seen as a “thing-in-themselves,” but instead as physical regions consisting of layered evidence of multiple issues that need attention and support so that they could become cleaner and healthier environments. "Paradigm," consists of a series of objects- each dedicated to a pollutent of the environment that it is placed in. In Ballona Creek, Paradigm's eight objects were dedicated to toxins found in the creeks water, such as Cyanide, Coliform Bacteria, Copper, Zinc, etc., according to the Los Angeles Regional Water Quality Control Board’s Santa Monica Bay Watershed Management Area summary in 2009. The toxins are currently discharged into the Pacific Ocean affecting the wildlife and quality of the water, resulting in an acute health risk for humans swimming, surfing and eating the fish. The grouping of Paradigm would investigate the space in which the water is held and the relationship of its contents to the surrounding community. "Paradigm" has a universal aesthetic while existing as functional art by trapping trash that flows down the Ballona Creek.

“Paradigm” is an example of our capacity to impact and control nature’s elements while exposing the environment’s desperate need for our constructive intervention. Graham Goddard’s work also encourages new ways of seeing a familiar landscape and explores our preconceived notions of what a “Creek” is or should be. The work’s abstract aesthetic challenges the theoretical validity of the Picturesque, introduced by William Gilpin in 1782, by exploring the dialectic between the physical landscape and its temporal context. Paradigm’s presence would also amplify the Ballona creek’s characteristics, such as algae and objects of pollution found on the site, which have transformed Ballona Creek into a landscape that is layered with the evidence of natural growth, weathering and the perverse signs of destructive human behavior.

Gallery exhibitions

Artists Bob Mackie and Graham Goddard at their exhibition in Horizon's Fine Art Gallery, 2009.

In December 2009 Graham Goddard was invited to exhibit at Horizon's Fine Art in the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago with Bob Mackie and Jonathon Guy-Gladding.[26] Goddard's large acrylic paintings investigated the ephemeral nature of Trinidad’s ever-changing forest by eliminating and substituting it with black backgrounds, fading backdrops and inverted images.[27] Goddard’s work also explored the detritus of transition and change: the debris and scattered sediment of one’s journey, filled with choices that result in personal introspection and growth. Masked with traditional Trinidadian imagery, such as native birds, fruit and flora, Graham Goddard’s paintings were occasionally deceptive and subtly addressed issues of displacement and capitalism while encouraging the viewer to be optimistic about life’s challenges.[28] Legendary carnival designer Brian MacFarlene and Trinidadian artist Carlisle Harris were in attendance.

Graham Goddard and artists in the exhibition "An Idea Called Tomorrow at the California African American Museum, 2009.

In 2009 Goddard exhibited at the Avenue 50 Gallery's "365 and Counting" Exhibition in Los Angeles.[29] Goddard featured the inverted painting "Hope in a World of Peril". Notable artists in the exhibition included Chukes, CCH Pounder and Yrneh Brown.[30] "Hope In a World of Peril" explored text from the Book of Revelation in the Bible and addressed the perilous political climate that the United States was in as President Barack Obama completed his historical first year in office as President of the United States.[31] Graham Goddard's solo exhibition at LA Artcore on March 2, 2011 - March 27, 2011, featured works that referenced America's changing identity in the 20th century.

In May 2011 Goddard was chosen by the Los Angeles Contemporary Museum of Art's (LACMA) Director of Contemporary Art, Franklin Sirmans, to show with 10 other emerging artists at the Rema Hort Mann Foundation's exhibition, "The Los Angeles Initiative," at Honor Fraser Gallery in Culver City, CA. "America at Play," a rotating painting featured in the exhibition, explores the major issues that the United States faced in the first decade of the 21st century. Highlighting the discrimination, exploitation and controversial topics that affect Americans, the painting uses a playground of children as a metaphor for the United States’ tumultuous political climate. “America at Play” addresses the issues of same-sex Marriage, immigration, Native American exploitation, polygamy, the World Trade Center bombing and Hurricane Katrina. At 9 feet long and 6 feet tall, “America at Play” exists as a powerful protagonist in the fight for full and equal rights of all Americans.

Graham Goddard's "Time is of the Essence" series was featured in the Whole 9 Gallery's exhibition "ZERO HOUR" in Culver City, CA, in July 2012. The exhibition also included the works of Ashleigh Sumner, Joan Scheibel and Fred Felmesser.

Music and Neo-expressionism

On October 12, 2015 Graham Goddard launched a new body of work that merges music and Neo-expressionist painting. Goddard uses music as a means of new expression and as a vehicle of inspiration for the new paintings in his creative process. The new work consists of large-scale (6ft) rotating paintings that were simultaneously created with the poetry and songs. The new series was created by Goddard as an investigation of the limits of his creativity and artistic expression. Referencing his new artistic direction and decision to include music performance and song writing with his rotating paintings, Goddard states, "Creativity has no limits. In the end, I want to have used all that is within me."[32]

During the creative process, Graham Goddard partnered with musician and music producer, Patrick Graves, to create the songs in the series. "Run to the Light," the first song and painting introduced, addressed Goddard's struggle with aspiring for more while being stagnant in life. Each song and painting in the new series is scheduled to be released in increments by Goddard throughout 2016 and 2017.

Philanthropy and community involvement

Graham Goddard has been a guest speaker at colleges and high schools including Loyola Marymount University, the University of Southern California and Fox Lane High School in Bedford, New York.

In 2008 Graham Goddard launched the "Surrender a Moment to God" project, which encourages at-risk inner city youth to contribute to a large painting by drawing, painting, or writing statements explaining what surrendering to God means to them. Over 200 at-risk youth in Southern California have contributed to the project. Goddard believes that when young people are faced with tough circumstances, the simplest and most powerful thing they can do is get closer to God.

References

  1. Graham Goddard profile. Horizon's Fine Art
  2. "Glendale artist works to make art more accessible with a smartphone app". June 24, 2016.
  3. Matthew Pelin (January 30, 2016). "Tech Finds a Place in the Art Market". ArtNewsDaily.com. Retrieved February 7, 2016.
  4. Artslant artist profile- Graham Goddard
  5. Neha Kash (November 23, 2004). "A Tilt on the Human Condition". The Daily Trojan. Retrieved 2005-09-18.
  6. "The Art of Harmony: An Art Competition Gives Miami Area Students Forum for Artistic Expression", The Free Library.
  7. Sonia Tracey-McCallum (November 14, 2006). "Background Information on the Three Artists who will Exhibit". JAMCCAR. Archived from the original on September 29, 2006. Retrieved 2005-06-28.
  8. Erika Caufield (July 26, 2005). "Chairwoman Cornell and Legislator Fried Honor Jamaican Artists for JAMCCAR's 2005 Heritage Celebrations". Rockland County Legislature. Retrieved 2007-08-17.
  9. "Brands". Zappos.com
  10. Rosemary Carstens (April 28, 2009). "Inside My Head Excites the Mind...". Artist Spotlight. Retrieved 2009-11-21.
  11. "California African American Museum Erases Distinction Between Fine Arts and Crafts", Art Daily.
  12. "California African American Museum shows 'Inside My Head: Intuitive Artists of African Descent'”, Art Knowledge News.
  13. G. Vitte (September 16, 2009). "Inside My Head with G.Goddard". livelevated.com. Retrieved 2009-10-15.
  14. "Graham Goddard in Group Exhibition", Roski News.
  15. Alumni Spotlight. CGU Alumni Community
  16. Katy Donoghue (January 26, 2010). "An Idea Called Tomorrow". Whitewall Contemporary Art and Lifestyle Magazine. Retrieved 2010-02-24.
  17. Brent Turner (November 19, 2009). "Multi-Venue Exhibition An Idea Called Tomorrow Invites Fifteen Contemporary Artists to Examine Issues of Social Justice in the Future". AnIdeaCalledTomorrow. Retrieved 2009-11-28.
  18. "An Idea Called Tomorrow - 2", Discover Los Angeles.
  19. "An Idea Called Tomorrow Exhibition" KCET.
  20. Artslant Events -Skirball Museum's "An Idea Called Tomorrow II".
  21. "Artist Talk - An Idea Called Tomorrow", NBC, Los Angeles.
  22. Graham Goddard - Paradigm.
  23. "An Idea Called Tomorrow". Daily Serving.
  24. "Three Man Show at Horizon's", Newsday, November 27, 2009.
  25. "The Art of Mackie, Goddard & Guy-Gladding", Artslant.
  26. "Exhibition at Horizon's", Carib Journal, November 27, 2009.
  27. "Obama: 365 & Counting", Art for a Change.com.
  28. Avenue 50 Studio Opening November 14. Outside.In.
  29. Avenue 50 Opening. Nela Live.
  30. Article by Crystal Ann Chin Truthseekers, October 28, 2015.

External links

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