Open: Mon-Fri 11am-6pm

19 East 66th Street, NY 10065, New York, United States
Open: Mon-Fri 11am-6pm


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Ali Dipp: American Craft

Franklin Parrasch Gallery, New York

Thu 23 Feb 2023 to Fri 14 Apr 2023

19 East 66th Street, NY 10065 Ali Dipp: American Craft

Mon-Fri 11am-6pm

Artist: Ali Dipp

Franklin Parrasch Gallery presents its first exhibition of work by Ali Dipp (b. 1997, El Paso, TX), American Craft. Born on the binational precipice between the United States and Mexico, Ali Dipp is interested in the evolution of America’s self-representation. Her hometown of El Paso, the former jean capital of the world before NAFTA, sets the backdrop to thematic currents she probes by creating paintings on denim with thread.


Artworks

It's Morning in America (Benjamin Franklin — Constitutional Convention, 1787)

Ali Dipp

It's Morning in America (Benjamin Franklin — Constitutional Convention, 1787), 2023

Manual stitch on denim

1841 × 1276 mm

50 1/4 x 72 1/2 in | 127.6 x 184.1 cm

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Niagara (1857—For Frederic E. Church)

Ali Dipp

Niagara (1857—For Frederic E. Church), 2022

Manual stitch on denim and screen-printed images on canvas interlaced

1549 × 1295 mm

51 x 61 in | 129.5 x 154.9 cm

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Peak (Albert Bierstadt 1860 — Of Course No. 3)

Ali Dipp

Peak (Albert Bierstadt 1860 — Of Course No. 3), 2022-2023

Manual stitch on denim

2914 × 1828 mm

72 x 114 3/4 in | 182.8 x 291.4 cm

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America is Hard to See (For Jasper Johns)

Ali Dipp

America is Hard to See (For Jasper Johns), 2022

Manual stitch on denim

1511 × 1200 mm

47 1/4 x 59 1/2 in | 120 x 151.1 cm

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Westward (Emanuel Leutze 1860 — Of Course No. 1)

Ali Dipp

Westward (Emanuel Leutze 1860 — Of Course No. 1), 2022

Manual stitch on denim

2362 × 1651 mm

65 x 93 in | 165.1 x 236.2 cm

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Crossing (Emanuel Leutze 1851 — Of Course No. 2)

Ali Dipp

Crossing (Emanuel Leutze 1851 — Of Course No. 2), 2022

Manual stitch on denim

2171 × 1460 mm

57 1/2 x 85 1/2 in | 146 x 217.1 cm

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Installation Views

Informed by her Lebanese and Syrian familial lineages that migrated to Mexico and the U.S., Dipp fundamentally sees America as a moving picture. From her intrinsic proximity to both the southwestern border and her immigrant heritage, Dipp posits a nation’s ideals are wrought from the labor of daily efforts; aspiration as an American condition has long been central to Dipp’s work. While Dipp originally began making denim stitch paintings to commemorate her family’s immigrant legacy, she has expanded her initial investigations to think about a broadened scope of trajectories across American history.

After viewing the 2015 Whitney Museum of American Art’s exhibition America Is Hard to See, referencing the title of the 1951 Robert Frost poem, Dipp realized that the image that most reminded her of America was the portrait on her grandfather’s green card, as it referred not to a country that we can see but a country conceived by an appetite for all that is not here yet. Dipp postulates that America is not hard to see, but rather is impossible to see, since it is a nation built on visions we can only foresee – a self-evident story of insatiable pursuit. Employing the use of a manual sewing machine, Dipp repurposes denim and thread to speak broadly about what the borderland vividly visualizes: the shape of a nation.

Dipp’s works amass a collection of images across 300 years of nation-making painting, spanning from the Hudson River Valley School through twenty-first century depictions of the West. Together, this set of historical pictures form an aesthetic argument about how American representations reflect a changing nation. Evidence of these visual motifs resound across works of Emanuel Leutze, Frederic Edwin Church, and Albert Bierstadt.

Manually stitching on repurposed Wrangler jeans from El Paso’s Salvation Army store, this exhibition includes three large stitch paintings from an in-progress twelve-part series titled Of Course, as well as a selection of related representational and abstract stitched works. In Dipp’s piece “America is Hard to See (For Jasper Johns)” (2022), for example, a radiant patchwork of stitched denim spells out the namesake phrase. Much as she describes her aesthetic argument through examination and redefinition of Bierstadt’s and Leutze’s hallmark images in those respective Of Course works, Dipp pays homage to Johns’ America by obliterating the express articulation of text in this piece. As a whole, these denim heirlooms emphasize how reiterating visual scenes enforces American aspiration.

Along with recounting historical representational images, Dipp mends craft and modernism by tying a quilting lexicon into a modernist grid. Buffered by the structural edification of grids, lines, and trajectories, American Craft testifies that even images that present the process of moving into novel terrain pose a promise that is hardly new at all. In bringing about manually-stitched and print-based renditions of historical nation-making images, Dipp’s works interrogate how the ideas of progress themselves progress.

Ali Dipp graduated from the Brown-RISD Dual Degree Program in May 2022 with dual degrees from Brown University (A.B., English) and Rhode Island School of Design (B.F.A., Painting). Dipp is now pursuing an interdisciplinary Ph.D. at Stanford University in Modern Thought and Literature. She is the recipient of the Royal Drawing Academy’s Dumfries Residency in Scotland. Dipp has staged her original plays though the company she co-founded in 2012, Sunhouse Arts. Sunhouse Arts donates all net profits to humanitarian efforts in the El Paso-Juárez area. During the spring and summer of 2021, Dipp co-hosted and was the creator of an iHeartRadio show broadcasted across the Southwest and Mexico, the Pass of the North Radio Show. Dipp recently completed the first manuscript that she aims to publish, Book of Yet. Ali Dipp is represented by Franklin Parrasch Gallery.

Courtesy of the artist and Franklin Parrasch Gallery

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