Jeffrey Gibson

Painter

Birthday March 31, 1972

Birth Sign Aries

Birthplace Colorado Springs, Colorado, U.S.

Age 51 years old

Nationality United States

#37799 Most Popular

1972

Jeffrey A. Gibson (born 1972) is an American Mississippi Choctaw/Cherokee painter and sculptor.

He has lived and worked in Brooklyn, New York; Hudson, New York; and Germantown, New York.

In 2024, Gibson will represent the United States at the Venice Biennale, where he will be the first indigenous artist to have a solo exhibition in the American pavilion.

Jeffrey A. Gibson was born on March 31, 1972, in Colorado Springs, Colorado.

As a child, he lived in North Carolina, New Jersey, West Germany, and South Korea, moving frequently because his father worked for the United States Department of Defense.

1995

Gibson earned his Bachelor of Fine Arts degree in 1995 from the School of the Art Institute of Chicago.

1998

In 1998 he received his Master of Fine Arts from the Royal College of Art in London, where he focused on painting.

His graduate education was sponsored by the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians.

Gibson remarked on this opportunity provided for him: "My community has supported me ... My chief felt that me going there, being a strong artist, made him stronger."

Gibson has identified as queer and gay.

He is married to Norwegian artist Rune Olsen, and together they have a daughter and son.

Gibson is an artist in residence at Bard College, where he also teaches in studio art courses.

2008

Airbrushing is another common tool used in his paintings, sculptures, and prints, incorporating oil paint and spray paint to create neon colored abstracts such as Singular (2008) and Submerge (2007).

These works also find inspiration in graffiti, reflective of Gibson's urban life in New York City.

Gibson is represented by Roberts Projects in Los Angeles, Sikkema Jenkins & Co. in New York, and Stephen Friedman Gallery in London.

Gibson draws influence in materials, processes, media, and iconographies.

He has found inspiration in events that revolve around dancing, specifically from Leigh Bowery and his dramatic nightclub persona.

Pow-wows, nightclubs, and raves provide contrasts as rural and urban venues, serving as spaces for dancing, movement, and dramatic fashion/regalia.

2009

Creating his own totem sculptures, in 2009 Gibson produced the Totems series for an exhibition at Sala Diaz in San Antonio, Texas.

This series of sculptures involved Gibson arriving five days before the opening to put together a collection of found objects to create what have been described, by the artist, as "fantasy sex partners, objects of desire".

The Totems feature objects such as mannequins acquired from Craigslist, a wig, Plastic Flowers, toys, cowboy boots, flower pots, his signature spray paint and other objects.

2010

In 2010 he was a visiting artist at the California College of the Arts.

In order to keep regular studio hours, Gibson prefers to work between the hours of 10 am and 6 pm.

His computer, cell phone, and a movie are generally at his reach if a break is needed while working.

Music usually plays in the background, sometimes random, sometimes a specific record with genres ranging from African funk, jazz, punk, pop music, rap, R&B, disco, as well as East Indian drumming.

Gibson's art deals with issues of identity and labels.

His work has featured the use of mixed media including Native American beadwork, trading post blankets, metal studs, fringe, and jingles.

2015

His work Document, 2015 (2015) is made with acrylic and graphite on deer rawhide, hung with steel spikes.

Under Cover (2015) was a made with rawhide stretched over wood panel.

Before that Gibson's most notable works, his at times 3-D wall abstracts, have been described as "atmospheric landscapes".

Working in oil paint he also brings together objects that have become a signature to his works: pigmented silicon, urethane foam, and beads.

2017

Alive showed as part of the Desert x exhibition in the Coachella Valley from February 25 to April 30, 2017

2019

Keeping with regalia, 19th-century Iroquois beadwork also provides inspiration, as colorful beads often find their way into Gibson's artworks.

Gibson also provides his own spin on graffiti, which is seen frequently in his works.

He also credits his nomadic lifestyle as a major influence, bringing together what he describes as:

"... varying aesthetics of each place. Some have had specific cultural aesthetics, language barriers, cultural barriers, etcetera. These differences funnel through me, a queer Native male born toward the end of the 20th century and entering the 21st century. I consider this hybrid in the construction of my work and attempt to show that complexity."

Gibson's practice has involved painting in oil and acrylic on rawhide-clad wood panels.

He is recycling found objects such as antique shaving mirrors and ironing boards and covers them in untanned deer, goat, or elk skin.

Gibson combines domestic, Native American, and Hard-edge modernist references.

His punching bag made from found Everlast punching bags, U.S. Army wool blankets, glass beads, tin jingles, and the artist's repurposed paintings exemplify the dialogue between mainstream pop culture and Native American powwow aesthetics.