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MIMI SMITH: Breaking News

Art Basel Miami Beach 2024 | Survey, Booth S11

December 6 – 9, 2024

MIMI SMITH: Breaking News
Mimi Smith Slave Ready: Corporate, 1991-1993

Mimi Smith
Slave Ready: Corporate, 1991-1993
Suit: steel wool, pinstripe fabric, aluminum hanger; painting: acrylic and pencil on canvas; clock: acrylic and computer prints on clock
50 x 60 x 6 in  (127 x 152.4 x 15.2 cm)

Mimi Smith July 12, News at Noon, 1978

Mimi Smith
July 12, News at Noon, 1978
Television drawings
Graphite and color pencil on black paper
30 x 40 in (76.2 x 101.6 cm)
34 x 44 in (86.4 x 111.8 cm) Framed

Mimi Smith November 23, Thanksgiving 1978, 1979

Mimi Smith
November 23, Thanksgiving 1978, 1979
Television drawings
Graphite and color pencil on black paper
30 x 40 in (76.2 x 101.6 cm)
34 x 44 in (86.4 x 111.8 cm) Framed

Mimi Smith Election Night Returns 2, 1976

Mimi Smith
Election Night Returns 2, 1976
Television drawings
Ink and graphite on paper
22.5 x 30 in (57.2 x 76.2 cm)
26.5 x 34 in (67.3 x 86.4 cm) Framed

Mimi Smith Please Have a Nice Day, 1977

Mimi Smith
Please Have a Nice Day, 1977
Television drawings
Ink and graphite on paper
22.5 x 30 in (57.2 x 76.2 cm)
26.5 x 34 in (67.3 x 86.4 cm) Framed

Mimi Smith Please Get Up, 1977

Mimi Smith
Please Get Up, 1977
Television drawings
Ink and graphite on paper
22.5 x 30 in (57.2 x 76.2 cm)
26.5 x 34 in (67.3 x 86.4 cm) Framed

Mimi Smith Violence in America, Good Evening, 1977

Mimi Smith
Violence in America, Good Evening, 1977
Television drawings
Ink and graphite on paper
22.5 x 30 in (57.2 x 76.2 cm)
26.5 x 34 in (67.3 x 86.4 cm) Framed

Mimi Smith Her Time, Their Money, 1986

Mimi Smith
Her Time, Their Money, 1986
Acrylic paint, computer print on clock
13 x 13 x 3 in (33 x 33 x 7.6 cm)

Mimi Smith Woman's Work is Never Done, Health, 1995

Mimi Smith
Woman's Work is Never Done, Health, 1995
Acrylic paint, computer print on clock
14 x 14 x 2 in  (35.6 x 35.6 x 5.1 cm)

Mimi Smith Women's Work Is Never Done, Clean, 1994

Mimi Smith
Women's Work Is Never Done, Clean, 1994
Acrylic paint, computer print on clock
14 x 14 x 2 in  (35.6 x 35.6 x 5.1 cm)

Mimi Smith You Only Live Once, 1990

Mimi Smith
You Only Live Once, 1990
Acrylic paint, computer print on clock
14 x 14 x 2 in (35.6 x 35.6 x 5.1 cm)

Mimi Smith Time is Money, 1989

Mimi Smith
Time is Money, 1989
Acrylic paint, computer print on clock
10 x 10 x 2 in  (25.4 x 25.4 x 5.1 cm)

Mimi Smith Let's Get Away (artist's book), 1980

Mimi Smith
Let's Get Away (artist's book), 1980
Television drawings
14 x 12 x 1 in (35.6 x 30.5 x 2.5 cm) closed
14 x 12 x 74 in (35.6 x 30.5 x 188 cm) open

Mimi Smith Stay Tuned (artist's book), 1981

Mimi Smith
Stay Tuned (artist's book), 1981
Television drawings
14.75 x 12 x 1 in (37.5 x 30.5 x 2.5 cm) closed
14.75 x 12 x 95.5 in (37.5 x 30.5 x 242.6 cm) open

Mimi Smith Now Here's the News, 1982

Mimi Smith
Now Here's the News, 1982
Acrylic and graphite on canvas, audio
11 x 42 in (27.9 x 106.7 cm)

Mimi Smith This is a Test, 1983

Mimi Smith
This is a Test, 1983
Edition of 700
Offset printed vellum and paper with purple flocked cover, gold embossed titled
20.7 x 27.4 in (52.6 x 69.6 cm)

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image featuring Television Drawings, Clocks, artist books, and garment sculpture installation

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Mimi Smith: Breaking News, Art Basel Miami Beach, booth installation image

Press Release

MIMI SMITH: Breaking News

Art Basel Miami Beach | Survey Section, Booth S11

December 6-8, 2024

Luis De Jesus Los Angeles is pleased to announce our participation in Art Basel Miami Beach 2024, Survey Section, Booth S11, with a solo presentation titled, MIMI SMITH: Breaking News, a survey of historic work by pioneering feminist artist Mimi Smith. The fair runs December 6-8, 2024 at the Miami Beach Convention Center.

MIMI SMITH: Breaking News focuses on the artist's series of rarely exhibited Television Drawings, which recorded live news broadcasts in the 1970s and 80s, along with a newscast performance video of the artist reading the news; a series of conceptual clocks that chronicle pressing issues throughout the 1980s and 90s; and a critical clothing sculpture installation that addresses women in the workplace and, by extension, women's rights (Smith is the first known artist to create clothing as sculpture in the 1960s). This presentation will also include a handmade book of original drawings—an elaboration of her Television Drawings series.

Smith’s use of relatable, everyday materials and personal narratives empowers her works to raise questions that expand beyond early feminist issues to social matters that are as prescient today as they were when she created the work. Exhibiting multiple series together, it becomes evident that Smith's works are layered and do not simply rest in satire. Smith's multi-disciplinary practice, using quotidian objects and vernacular language and performance—from clocks to conceptual uniforms to recorded rhetoric—draws out critical conversations on contemporary matters.

The Television Drawings encapsulate Smith's desire to relate her work to her life and ours. As a stay-at-home mother of two young children in the 1970s, she would often have the TV on in the background. She recalls, " I began to do these drawings because the constant information of the world invading my studio and home was not avoidable. However, I was still involved with the basic theory of relating my work to experiences in a society that are shared by many people.”

Smith’s Television Drawings were created before the advent of 24-hour news channels. Depicting daily morning, noon and evening news broadcasts as calligraphic stanzas, installations, audio works, and performances, her meticulous cursive transcripts documented such current events as the 1976 Ford-Carter presidential election, the Jonestown Massacre, Thanksgiving 1978 and Black Friday, a toxic spill at a New Jersey waste site, Princess Diana and Prince Charles’ wedding, Mia Farrow's divorce, a city bus accident, violence in America, the economy, weather, sports and a host of other daily stories.

Smith’s Clock Series presents an array of vintage wall clocks (like those found in schools and offices) with faces and hands that tally the urgency of pressing matters such as women’s rights, gender parity, the environment, AIDS, and gun violence. The clocks are augmented with paint, printed news clippings, and images collaged over the face, minutes and hours. Slave Ready: Corporate (1991-1993), Smith’s clothing sculpture installation, features a “dress for success" garment: a grey pinstripe suit edged in steel wool—a conceptual form of armor for women climbing the corporate ladder. To the right of the suit a wall clock reads “Just a Minute, Please” (as if women’s equity can wait), and on the left side, a computer Error Message painting exclaims “Slave Ready.” In the 1980s, Smith learned computer programming which inspired a series of paintings of computer error messages. This series critiques biases prevalent in the early "master-slave" computer-user language which was highly coded for inaccessibility.

Re-examined in the present moment, the works presented in MIMI SMITH: Breaking News poignantly critique notions of progress, illuminating critical matters that continue to be lightning rods in contemporary society. Smith's works ask us to consider the terms of everyday life and particularly their connection to women's experience. Her language is both wry and consequential, stimulating the viewer to question how public policies and private lives are interconnected.

Mimi Smith (b. 1942, Brookline, MA) received her BFA from Massachusetts College of Art in 1963 and her MFA from Rutgers University in 1966. Her work was included in the seminal exhibition WACK! Art and the Feminist Revolution (2007) at MoCA, Los Angeles, CA and PS1, Queens, NY, curated by Connie Butler, and has been exhibited extensively throughout the United States and internationally at such institutions as the New Museum, NY; The Museum of Modern Art, NY; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis; Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, MA; Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco; Rhode Island School of Design, Providence; The Bronx Museum, NY; Mass MoCA, North Adams, MA; Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris, FR; Hayward Gallery, London, UK; and The Institute of Contemporary Art, Tokyo, JP, among others. Smith has been awarded a Joan Mitchell Grant, a New York Foundation of the Arts Fellowship, and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship Grant. Smith's works are in the collection of the Baltimore Museum of Art, MD; Museum of Modern Art, NY; The Getty, Los Angeles, CA; Spencer Museum of Art, Lawrence, KS; Fogg Art Museum, Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, MA; The Museum of Art, Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, RI;

For further information, including images and previews, please contact Gallery Director, Brianna Bakke at 213-395-0762, or gallery@luisdejesus.com. Gallery Instagram: @luisdejesuslosangeles.

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