Artist and curator Julia Ault, painter Titus Kaphar, and filmmaker and performance artist Wu Tsang have been named among the latest group of “genius” grant winners from the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation. The “no strings attached” grant of $625,000 is paid out in quarterly installments over a period of five years.
According to the MacArthur Foundation website, the fellows are determined based on three criteria: exceptional creativity; promise for important future advances based on past accomplishments; and potential for the grant to facilitate subsequent creative work.
Ault, 61, who resides in New York, is cited for redefining the role of the artwork and the artist by melding artistic, curatorial, archival, editorial, and activist practices into a new form of cultural production. Her work emphasizes the connections between cultural production and politics, while often using historical inquiry.
Among her recent projects are Afterlife: a constellation, which was shown at the 2014 Whitney Biennial, and the collaboration Macho Man Tell It To My Heart: Collected by Julie Ault, shown at Artists Space in New York in 2013. In 1979, Ault co-founded Group Material, a collective which examined the relationship between art, activism, and politics before disbanding in 1996.
Kaphar, 42, who resides in New Haven, Connecticut and shows with Jack Shainman Gallery, stresses the lack of representation of people of color in the canon of Western art, with paintings that skillfully “desconstruct the literal and visual structure of the artwork,” according to MacArthur Foundation description.
Kaphar entered the wider public consciousness when his painting referencing the protests in Ferguson, Missouri, Yet Another Fight for Remembrance, appeared on the cover of Time magazine in 2014. Nevertheless, he has said that despite the perception that his works are “very social or political,” he sees them as personal.
Tsang, 36, is cited by the MacArthur Foundation for creating new conceptual and visual vocabularies that explore hidden histories and marginalized narratives. The artist’s best-known work focuses on “the coming together of two very different groups of people,” young queer artists of color and the long-time patrons of a bar, the Silver Platter, located near MacArthur Park in Los Angeles, around a regular event, “Wildness,” that Tsang threw there.
Tsang has been featured in the 2012 Whitney Biennial as well as in the Hammer Museum’s 2014 “Made in L.A.” biennial.