Maya Stovall: Under New Ownership

Presented By

(With) The San Francisco Art Institute


THIS EXHIBIT WAS ON VIEW FROM
MARCH 3 THROUGH MAY 5, 2019.

Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture (FMCAC) and San Francisco Art Institute (SFAI) jointly presented Maya Stovall: Under New Ownership, an exhibition of the artist’s innovative performance-based interventions in public life. A self-described “radical ballerina,” Maya Stovall explored questions of human existence, creating works that “vividly juxtapose art and life” (The New York Times) through unannounced performances in contemporary urban spaces. The exhibition marked the latest partnership between FMCAC and SFAI, the latter of which rehabilitated the historic Fort Mason Pier 2 and opened their Fort Mason Campus in 2017.

Stovall’s Liquor Store Theatre (2014–present) stages and films performance actions in and around businesses in the McDougall-Hunt neighborhood in Detroit. Stovall inserts sequences of performances in an otherwise everyday rhythm, drawing out the people shopping, rushing, and hanging around. The dancers’ centered movement is juxtaposed with Detroiters’ stories, drawing on the energy of the city’s corners, sidewalks, and parking lots to picture this urban fabric in new ways.

Under New Ownership brings together selections from Liquor Store Theatre and the video series Havnepladsen Ballet (2017) and Water City (2018). The exhibition highlights The Public Library (2018–present), an ongoing project performed and filmed in Saskatoon, CA. This new work takes Stovall’s artistic method outside of her hometown to foreground the people making the Saskatoon main library a public crossroads. Through her performance, Stovall elicits views on immigration, local and cross-border economics, narco-cultures, and civic pride. The exhibition also features two new conceptual sculpture series: Untitled (B-F), built from abandoned commercial signage; and the Theorem Sculptures (A-D), objects made with an eye to performance.

Exhibition Information
Under New Ownership
was on view March 29, 2019, through May 5, 2019 at the San Francisco Art Institute’s Fort Mason Campus, located at Pier 2. Exhibition hours were Wednesday through Sunday, 11 a.m.-7 p.m. Closed Monday-Tuesday. Free admission.

Theorem, no.1 Performance
In conjunction with the close of the exhibition, Stovall presented a live performance on May 3, 2019 of Theorem, no.1, commissioned by FMCAC. Distilling the thinking and theorizing behind earlier projects, Theorem is a meditation on the fervor, grit, and craving of the day-to-day urban experience.

Coursing through city streets, Theorem casts a critical and celebratory gaze on fraught spaces and places while investigating the politics of the everyday. With actions referring to text, movement, object, and ritual, a group of artists spin a bizarre world within a world that’s already there. Participating artists included Seycon-Nadia Chea, Bana Kabalan, Mo Soumah, and Todd Stovall. Todd Stovall’s all-new original Detroit electronic music score situates and drives the performance as an exploration of research, wonder, and grind as it appears through the city. Find full details for the May 3, 2019 performance here.

About Maya Stovall
Working across the disciplines of performance and dance, moving and still image, installation, and text, Maya Stovall explores the monumental questions of human existence, creating works that “vividly juxtapose art and life” (The New York Times). Equally an artist and an anthropologist, she holds a PhD in anthropology; a book based on her dissertation, Liquor Store Theatre: Ethnography & Contemporary Art in Detroit, is forthcoming from Duke University Press in spring 2020.

A participating artist in the 2017 Whitney Biennial and the Studio Museum Harlem’s 2017–18 F-Series, Stovall’s artwork has been widely shown in the US, Canada, and Europe. Her artworks are included in the permanent collections of the Cranbrook Art Museum and the Whitney Museum of American Art. Stovall lives and works in her hometown of Detroit, as well as in Los Angeles County, where she is an assistant professor at California Polytechnic State University (Cal Poly), Pomona.

Image captions:

  1. Maya Stovall, Liquor Store Theatre, vol.1, no.1, HD video, color, stereo surround sound, 4 minutes, Detroit, MI, USA, 2014.
  2. Maya Stovall, Liquor Store Theatre, vol.1, no.1, HD video, color, stereo surround sound, 4 minutes, Detroit, MI, USA, 2014.
  3. Maya Stovall, The Public Library, vol.1, no.4, HD video, color, stereo surround sound, 9 minutes 56 seconds, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, CA, 2018.
  4. Maya Stovall, The Public Library, vol.1, no.4, HD video, color, stereo surround sound, 7 minutes 52 seconds, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, CA, 2018.
  5. Maya Stovall, Under New Management, installation view, Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture. Photo by Pei Ketron.
  6. Maya Stovall, Under New Management, installation view, Fort Mason Center for Arts & Culture. Photo by Pei Ketron.
  7. Artist Maya Stovall. Photo by Pei Ketron.

Similar Events


More To Explore