Los Angeles Times

Intersecti­on of culture, Conceptual

Mark Bradford’s varied approach provides some powerful moments.

- CHRISTOPHE­R KNIGHT ART CRITIC

A site- specific mural, a video installati­on and 12 new paintings comprise Mark Bradford’s ruminative exhibition at the UCLA Hammer Museum, organized by curator Connie Butler. Together they form a kind of thumbnail sketch of the artist’s varied artistic approaches since he began showing regularly in 2002, launched at the former Patricia Faure Gallery.

The wall mural in the Hammer’s entry stairwell is a vast map of the United States. The contours of the 50 states are gouged into the wall, its surface sanded down to reveal ephemeral layers of earlier murals longsince painted over. Historical statistics recording HIV diagnoses are scratched into each of the union’s states — a dry accounting made physical.

“Spiderman,” the video installati­on, transforms a small, darkened gallery into an intimate, shabbily lighted stage. Text that parodies a grotesquel­y homophobic, 32- year- old Eddie Murphy comedy routine ( about which the entertaine­r later partly apologized) is projected on a wall, underscori­ng the transient spoken words.

The comedian in his redleather track suit is vaporously evoked by crimson lighting. Bradford’s language — the routine ricochets between shocking and absurd — hangs in the illuminate­d air. That the name of an adolescent superhero is the installati­on’s title is telling, a mix of deep anxiety and f lashy grandeur.

Bradford toils, here and elsewhere, in the congested intersecti­on of popular culture and Conceptual art. An archaeolog­y of memory, personal and cultural, is a primary thread running through it all. The work is labor- intensive, and it shows. Sweat- equity is a formal value.

The paintings are weathered abstractio­ns. In them Bradford fuses collage with décollage, layering sheet upon sheet of printed and painted paper and then tearing them away, sometimes with a sharp blade and sometimes with random ruptures. Lines of tape have been laid down, covered over with collage and ripped up, often creating intricate net-

works of tracery.

Bradford also draws on the surface with a hand sander, creating linear tracks and visually stuttering spots. Sedimentar­y depths are exposed. Artists as diverse as painter Adam Ross, sculptor Jedediah Caesar and the late ceramicist Kenneth Price have also exploited the surprising bursts of otherwise hidden color that the sanding process can create. It’s like letting inner light emerge.

As in past works, several of these paintings recall maps — urban traceries merged with star charts. Some, such as “The Next Hot Line,” are almost clinical, as if tracking the sinewy, internal tensions of muscle tissue and bodily ganglia. Others appear scabbed.

Three of the largest, most beautiful works are made on unstretche­d canvas tacked to the wall; hanging loose, the format emphasizes abstract painting’s traditiona­l allusion to skin. A few feature a large black shape gouged out of the material, the most provocativ­e a nectar- hungry hummingbir­d. Looming large in the painting, a delightful little bird casts an ominous shadow.

The show has powerful moments, but its drawback is that the suite of new paintings, made this year, isn’t much different from what one would expect to see at a routine commercial gallery exhibition. The stairwell mural and video installati­on add breadth, and there’s an accompanyi­ng book ( although it doesn’t fully chronicle the exhibition’s contents). Still, one expects a wider, more considered selection from a museum.

UCLA Hammer Museum, 10899 Wilshire Blvd., Westwood, ( 310) 443- 7000, through Sept. 27. Closed Mondays. www. hammer . ucla. edu

 ?? Hammer Museum ?? “THE NEXT HOT LINE” by Mark Bradford is almost clinical, as if tracking sinewy muscle tissue.
Hammer Museum “THE NEXT HOT LINE” by Mark Bradford is almost clinical, as if tracking sinewy muscle tissue.

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