Catalogue > Un extrait vidéo au hasard
Bradly Dever Treadaway, Justin Randolph Thompson
All The Good Times
Vidéo | mov | couleur et n&b | 9:41 | USA | 2018
All the Good Times is a sound based video installation and performance examining transatlantic aspirations in land lock as a metaphor for generational divides and the fetishization of histiographies. Performative gestures that seek to reclaim dislocated fatherhood and recalibrated pride blend with archival footage shot by the artists’ respective grandfathers. Fleeting memories are punctuated with the rhythm and repose of staged theatricality. Immersed in a soundscape that transforms the traditional tune All the Good Times are Past and Gone into an aggressively celebratory jazz infused piece the gallery is peppered with tv stacks littered with repetitive inconclusive processions. The installation examines the role of nostalgia coupled with the legacies of creole cuisine and the Black Atlantic questioning the distancing of technology and spirituality. The piece premiered at the 2019 Art of Brooklyn Film Festival.
Bradly Dever Treadaway is a Brooklyn based artist, educator and curator utilizing lens-based image making, moving images, sound, sculpture, installation and performance to comment on the breakdown of intergenerational communication and broken familial links due to natural disaster, technological evolution, mental health challenges, societal shifts and the continuance of interpersonal detachment occurring within American communities. His work is visualized through archival interventions, recontextualizing the archive to serve as form, medium, subject matter and concept, elevating domestic ephemera and rituals while questioning material significance within the photographic medium. Treadaway creates memorials, monuments and mnemonic devices to illustrate ancestral collisions with contemporary responses. His work has been exhibited at the Whitney Museum of Art, the Center for Photography at Woodstock, The International Center of Photography,The Ogden Museum of Southern Art in New Orleans, Agora Gallery in Chelsea, NY, The Mobile Museum of Art, The Ospedale degli Innocenti in Florence, Italy, and the Lishui Museum of Photography in China. His film/video work has been screened at the New Orleans Film Festival, the Carnegie Museum of Art, the National Centre for Contemporary Art in Moscow, Russia, Union Docs, The Rencontres Internationale Paris/Berlin, Anthology Film Archives, the Art of Brooklyn Film Festival, the Nashville Film Festival, the Coney Island Film Festival, and at the Brooklyn Arts Council’s Scene: Brooklyn. Treadaway’s work has been curated by Vince Aletti, Kevin Jerome Everson, Jon Feinstein and Julian Cox and is part of the permanent collections at The Center for Photography at Woodstock, The Ogden Museum of Southern Art, The Masur Museum of Art, the Ewing Gallery at the University of Tennessee, the Brooklyn Public Library and the Mobile Museum of Art. Treadaway has recently held residencies at Trestle Art Space and BRIC Media Arts in Brooklyn, Kutztown University in Pennsylvania and the Contemporary Arts Center at Woodside in NY. In 2021, he received City Artist Corps Grant to curate and produce Archival Interventions, a film screening at FiveMyles gallery in Crown Heights and he is the recipient of a 2024 Foundation for Contemporary Arts Grant. Treadaway is a Fulbright Scholar to Italy and a Faculty member at The International Center of Photography in New York City where he has taught a range of courses including topics related to analog and digital photography, video, sound, installation and archival interventions as the as the founding media. From 2008-2020, Treadaway also held the position of Digital Media Coordinator at ICP. Additionally, he has taught a range of courses at Bard College, SUNY Purchase, The Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT), Barnard College and Louisiana State University. He is available for private and small group mentorship on all lens-based topics – critique and project development, technical skillsets and workflows and more. Justin Randolph Thompson is an artist, cultural facilitator and educator born in Peekskill, NY in ’79. Based between Italy and the US since 1999, Thompson is Co-Founder and Director of Black History Month Florence, a multi-faceted exploration of Black histories and cultures in the context of Italy founded in 2016. Having realized, coordinated, curated, facilitated and promoted over 300 events and with 8 ongoing research platforms, the initiative has been reframed as a Black cultural center called The Recovery Plan. Thompson is a recipient of a 2022 Creative Capital Award, a 2020 Italian Council Research Fellowship, a Louis Comfort Tiffany Award, a Franklin Furnace Fund Award, a Visual Artist Grant from the Fundacion Marcelino Botin and an Emerging Artist Fellowship from Socrates Sculpture Park amongst others. His work and performances have been exhibited widely in institutions including The Whitney Museum of American Art, the Centro de Arte Reina Sofia and The American Academy in Rome and are part of numerous collections including The Studio Museum in Harlem, and the Museo MADRE. His life and work seek to deepen the discussions around socio-cultural stratification and the arrogance of permanence by employing fleeting temporary communities as monuments and fostering projects that connect academic discourse, social activism and DIY networking strategies in annual and biennial gathering, sharing and gestures of collectivity.