Boston Sunday Globe

Somerville-based artist Tomashi Jackson given Rappaport Prize by the deCordova Museum

- By Emma Glassman-Hughes GLOBE STAFF Emma Glassman-Hughes can be reached at emma.glassmanhu­ghes@globe.com. Follow her @eglassmanh­ughes.

On a recent afternoon, Tomashi Jackson painted wiggly green- and pink-hued stripes on canvas over a projected image taken by her mother, photograph­er Aver Marie Burroughs. It was a study of the bark of a tree in Burroughs’s California yard — one of the last pictures she took before she died in 2021.

Jackson was working on the new piece for her show “Minute by Minute,” which will open at Night Gallery in Los Angeles this fall. She’d recently learned she had won the deCordova Sculpture Park and Museum’s Rappaport Prize, which honors local artists who have “demonstrat­ed significan­t creativity and vision” and comes with a $50,000 cash award. “I was totally shocked,” she said speaking to the Globe via Zoom from her east Somerville studio. “But I’m incredibly humbled and honored.”

Born in Houston, Jackson, 43, grew up in Los Angeles and has since amassed numerous honors, from her admission to the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in 2019 to her inclusion in the Whitney Biennial that same year. But for all her success, she admits she “struggled with color” for “like, forever.” She can trace her “frothy confusion about color, the phenomenon of color, and how to move it and how to use it” back to second grade at her public arts elementary school in Los Angeles — a feeling that would follow her for years, she said, through her undergradu­ate and post-graduate studies at New York City’s Cooper Union, then MIT, and finally Yale, where she focused on painting and printmakin­g.

For her MFA thesis at Yale, Jackson spent time in the university’s law library, reading up on the legislativ­e history of the 1954 Supreme Court case Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka, which set forth the integratio­n of public schools across the US. She used black-and-white images from that era to connect the case with news from present-day 2016 — a time when “there was killing after killing after killing” of Black youth, she said.

But her classmates felt the desaturati­on of the images conveyed a forgotten past — not a “contempora­ry crisis,” she said. So Jackson switched to “very, very bright colors.”

“In the process, the work started to be read as absolutely joyous,” she said. “One of my professors was like, ‘You’re talking about things that are so sad. But the colors are so bright, it makes me hopeful.’”

Jackson, who has taught at Harvard University and Massachuse­tts College of Art and Design, said much of her work is defined by the push and pull of “grief and joy,” and how they appear differentl­y in public and private contexts.

In “Minute by Minute,” she merges images from her mother’s camera with her own photograph­s of her emergence from the COVID-19 lockdown. She describes Burroughs’s photos — dated just two months before she died from lung and liver cancer in the midst of the pandemic — as “very lonely and solitary,” with “no people, just trees.”

Meanwhile, Jackson’s own photograph­s capture the opposite: the ecstasy of returning to community after a year alone, with scenes from a Beyoncé show in London, a rooftop Juneteenth celebratio­n in Denver, a “Friendsgiv­ing” dinner with “chosen family.”

The fused images are projected onto canvases slathered in “earthen materials” collected from her travels, including sand from Colorado and marble dust from a quarry in Dionyssos, Greece, where marble for the nation’s famed monuments is harvested. The result is what Jackson calls a “crosshatch­ing” of divergent feelings: isolation and togetherne­ss, vulnerabil­ity and immortalit­y. “I’m kind of getting a kick out of turning my mother’s last photograph­s into this material that’s at least symbolical­ly related to the sacred monuments that have come to define much of our own collective relationsh­ip to democratic monumental­ity,” she said.

Similar themes arise in her mid-career survey, “Across the Universe,” at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art in Denver, which she noted will be coming to the Tufts University Art Galleries sometime next year. As part of her prize, Jackson will also be giving a talk at deCordova in the spring, though the museum itself closed for renovation­s in February for up to three years.

Sarah Montross, chief curator at deCordova, described Jackson as “a vital artist and vibrant educator who deeply researches and responds to critical topics, past and present,” noting that “her resulting artworks also make you want to investigat­e their many layers, textures, and materials.”

Jessica May, vice president of Art and Exhibition­s at The Trustees and artistic director of deCordova, told the Globe that jurors were “deeply impressed by the depth of her thinking about history and culture and the extraordin­ary visual power of her art.”

The prize, funded by the Phyllis and Jerome Lyle Rappaport Foundation, was first awarded in 2000, and was raised last year from $35,000 to $50,000.

 ?? JULIA FEATHERING­ILL/COURTESY THE ARTIST AND TILTON GALLERY, NEW YORK ??
JULIA FEATHERING­ILL/COURTESY THE ARTIST AND TILTON GALLERY, NEW YORK
 ?? WES MAYGAR ?? Tomashi Jackson (above) has taught at Harvard University and Massachuse­tts College of Art and Design. Top left and below: Works from “Across the Universe,” Jackson’s midcareer survey exhibition at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art Denver.
WES MAYGAR Tomashi Jackson (above) has taught at Harvard University and Massachuse­tts College of Art and Design. Top left and below: Works from “Across the Universe,” Jackson’s midcareer survey exhibition at the Museum of Contempora­ry Art Denver.
 ?? WES MAYGAR ??
WES MAYGAR

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