The Watering Hole: Art Basel Miami, Meridians Sector, M3

  • The watering hole Executed in 1996, The Watering Hole is a nine-panel photographic series that presents an assembly of images...
    Installation View of The Watering Hole as part of
    the exhibition "Memory" at MARUANI MERCIER, 2024

    The watering hole

     

    Executed in 1996, The Watering Hole is a nine-panel photographic series that presents an assembly of images from the artist’s personal archive, probing the relations between queerness, sexuality and violence. At once personal and political, the work operates at the intersection of key themes in the decades-long practice of the artist, who was the subject of a major retrospective at the Queens Museum in 2024. The present work is the only complete edition of nine panels in private hands, with another example in the collection of the Museum of Modern Art, New York and remaining editions having been sold separately in previous years.

     

    Mingling personal images, adverts, newspaper cut-outs and hand-written notes pinned onto a wood-panelled wall in saturated lighting, The Watering Hole traces the fascination with the black male body in visual culture, interrogating the border between sensuality and violence. Referencing the media coverage of serial killings by Jeffrey Dahmer, which were largely directed at black teenage boys, the work presents a poignant reflection on the traumas of the late 1980s and early 1990s. In each panel, Harris assembles and superimposes disparate, often contradictory images: Elizabeth Taylor as Cleopatra, artist’s early self-portraits, stencilled letters spelling ‘daddy’, clippings from sports magazines, calendars and adverts that collectively allude to the notion of consumption of the body as image. Drawing on a metaphor of the watering hole as a place of rejuvenation as well as a site of precarity, this series seeks to explore the idea of ambivalence and contradictory spaces, pointing to the cultural tropes of desire for the other.

     

    The artist has repeatedly returned to The Watering Hole as a seminal work in his practice, re-photographing and drawing on it in subsequent works. For Harris, the series operates as an important record of the complex historical period and of a formative moment in his artistic production. As the artist noted in his interview with the Brooklyn Rail, “Although The Watering Hole is dated 1996, there are certain images in this nine-panel work that go back to Act Up in ‘87, the exposé of Jeffery Dahmer coming to light, Magic Johnson coming out with HIV, and the L.A. uprising in ‘92—the images in these nine panels comprise a particular period of personal archive work.”

  • Installation of The Watering Hole as part of the exhibition
    "Collection 1970s–Present" at MoMa, 2019
  • Artwork Details

    THE WATERING HOLE (1996) nine duraflex prints framed 90 x 74 cm | 35 x 29 in framing dimensions: 93.5...

    The Watering Hole (Panel III)

    THE WATERING HOLE  (1996)

    nine duraflex prints framed

    90 x 74 cm | 35 x 29 in

    framing dimensions: 93.5 x 76.5 x 4.5 cm

    overall : 93.5 x 688.5 x 4.5 cm

    Ed. N°6/6

     

    EXHIBITIONS 

    Collection 1970s – present, Museum of Modern Art, New York, 2019-2020 (another edition exhibited).

    The Watering Hole, Jack Tilton Gallery, 1996. 

    Lyle Ashton Harris: Blow Up, Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art, Scottsdale, 2008 (another edition exhibited).

    Lyle Ashton Harris, MARUANI MERCIER, Brussels, 2014.

    Lyle Ashton Harris: Ombre à l’Ombre, The Warehouse by MARUANI MERCIER, 2019.

    Memory, MARUANI MERCIER, Brussels, 2024.

     

    LITERATURE 

    R. Smith, Art In Review. Lyle Ashton Harris: The Watering Hole, The New York Times, 1996. 

    Lyle Ashton Harris: Blow Up, exh. cat., Scottsdale Museum of Contemporary Art, 2008, p. 40 (selected panels illustrated in colour).

    Lyle Ashton Harris, exh. cat., MARUANI MERCIER, 2014 (illustrated in colour).

    Lyle Ashton Harris: Our First and Last Love, exh. cat., Queens Museum, 2024, (only panel VII illustrated in colour).

    Lyle Ashton Harris with McKenzie Wark, The Brooklyn Rail, 2020. 

     

    EDITIONS 

    1/6 Lyle Ashton Harris (complete edition)

    2-4/6 sold separately

    5/6 Collection of Museum of Modern Art, New York, donated by the collector Aggie Gund.

    6/6 MARUANI MERCIER, Belgium collection (complete edition) - present work

  • Artwork images

  • Artist biography

    LYLE ASHTON HARRIS Lyle Ashton Harris has cultivated a diverse artistic practice ranging from photography and collage to installation and...

    LYLE ASHTON HARRIS

     

    Lyle Ashton Harris has cultivated a diverse artistic practice ranging from photography and collage to installation and performance art. His work explores intersections between the personal and the political, examining the impact of ethnicity, gender, and desire on the contemporary social and cultural dynamic.

     

    Born in the Bronx, New York, raised in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, and New York, Harris obtained a Bachelor of Arts degree from Wesleyan University, a Master of Fine Arts degree from the California Institute of the Arts, and attended the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program. He is a Professor of Art at New York University and lives in New York.

    Harris is represented in the permanent collections of The Museum of Modern Art (MoMA), New York, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York, the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA), Los Angeles, the J. Paul Getty Museum, Los Angeles, Pérez Art Museum, Miami, the Tate Modern, London, UK, among others.

    He received a fellowship from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation (2016), the David C. Driskell Prize from the High Museum of Art, Atlanta (2014), and the Rome Prize Fellowship (2000) among other awards and honors. Harris joined the Board of Trustees of the American Academy in Rome in 2014 and was appointed a trustee of the Tiffany Foundation in 2016.