Interrogating the Visual Culture of Trumpism

Interrogating the Visual Culture of Trumpism includes a chapter co-authored by Andrew Ellis Johnson and Susanne Slavick on Johnson’s DRAIN series.

Edited by Grant Hamming and Natalie Philips. Published by Routledge (2024).

Drain presents a collection of annotated drawings that camouflage Trump’s calumny with the glitz of his notorious ersatz aesthetic. The luxurious trappings of the former president’s personal and business properties are depicted as protecting and comforting creatures of the swamp, exposing the emptiness of his campaign promise “to drain the swamp in Washington” with ethics reforms “to make our government honest once again." The devil is in the details of the decor, and the corruption that perpetuates it, ensuring the persistence of vice and venality. Some of the swamp creatures appear as inflatable toys, to be tolerated, even enjoyed and played with. Like his charge to drain the swamp, they were never meant to be taken seriously.

Andrew Ellis Johnson, Sanctuary of Style (Tower), 2023, ink on paper, 50 x 55.5 inches

HUMAN ANIMAL II COLLOQUIUM

Susanne Slavick presents Agitating Animals in this international colloquium, September 28-29 in Slovakia. Includes the work of Patricia Bellan-Gillen, Josh Bienko, Andrew Ellis Johnson, Lavar Munroe and Stephanie Ross.

Organized by Katarína Balúnová within the framework of Galéria umelcov Spiša’s Human Animal series of exhibitions, loosely interconnected with the current exhibition Human Animal II. / The Wolves Are Full, the Sheep Are Safe, the Pigs Are Laughing.

The colloquium brings together experts from the fields of philosophy, ecology and art and addresses the relationship of humans and animals not only from a cultural, historical and ethical perspective, but also in a broader sense in terms of the entire living environment. 

STOLEN GOODS

Marketview Arts, York College, York PA

Co-curated by York College Gallery Director Matthew Clay-Robison and Visiting Curator Matthew Apol. January 6 -February 23, 2022

Opening on the anniversary of the Capitol insurrection, this exhibition explores “the big lie” behind the Stop the Steal movement, looking deeper into questions of who the country belongs to, who gets to protest, and what has been stolen from whom throughout American history.

Stolen Goods features artists Dread Scott, Susanne Slavick, Andrew Ellis Johnson, Kate Kretz, Jefferson Pinder, Juan Juarez, Dillion Samuelson, Ivy Rodgers, Justin Ruby, Joe Velasquez, Josephine Hyde, Chawky Frenn, Paul Rucker Matt Blackwell, Gregory Eltringham, Jacob Cullers, Deborah Dancy and Thomas Nazario.

Susanne Slavick, Retraction, 2021, Oil on panel, 12 x 18 inches

GETTING THERE

Andrew Ellis Johnson and Susanne Slavick

Schmucker Art Gallery at Gettysburg College

September 4 - December 6, 2019

Catalogue available with poems by  David Hernandez, Maria Melendez Kelson, Blas Manuel De Luna, Dunya Mikhail, Prageeta Sharma, Warsan Shire, and Wisława Szymborska; an essay by Suketu Mehta; and texts by Vu Tran.

______________________________________________

Getting There is aspirational; it implies a destination, marking progress toward some kind of goal. Getting There is a burden, but also a dream of many migrants and refugees. We cannot speak for those in flight, in hiding, and in desperate hope.  But we can speak to the contradictory fears and hypocrisies, ignored histories and punitive policies that we as a nation hold and enact here.

 We are all from somewhere else. At some point in our family lineage, someone has crossed a border. Escape, expulsion, exile, exodus and emigration are integral to human history.  Today, there are over 65 million refugees, asylum-seekers and internally displaced people around the world, according to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. They are driven from their home by persecution, conflict and violence, or human rights violations.

 Driven or displaced, cut loose or set adrift, or simply seeking safety—all are precarious states of passage. The decision to leave home may be voluntary or involuntary, arising from desperation or anticipation. Those of us not needing to flee live in comparative luxury. Yet many Americans choose to feel invaded, believing our jobs are threatened or our culture diluted or even contaminated.

There is real fear and fabricated fear. Both are fierce and ubiquitous. There is the natural fear of the unknown, shared by the vulnerable and those made to feel vulnerable. How are the vanquished so easily demonized into a formidable foe by the rhetoric of demagogues and the media that serves them? Why do alarmist claims of invasion and infestation persist despite the evidence, and despite the abusive history of such language? The “other” is imagined as larger than life—and worse, fueling the dangerous perception that “the thing that is lower than I, makes me bigger.”

Such assumptions and attitudes insist that is not enough to be strong; those perceived as weak and powerless must be punished with deportation, incarceration, and separation from those they love. They must be dehumanized and denied rights to asylum and autonomy. They must remain invisible.  The works in Getting There question these manufactured imperatives and expose the consequences of our resentment or fear of “the stranger.”

The USA is a nation of immigrants and used to lead in resettling refugees. Today, with far fewer resources, Turkey and Pakistan now host the most refugees. Our current administration is slashing admissions to its lowest point in 40 years. Immigration policies have hardened, vilifying and incarcerating people who legally seek asylum. Outrage and soul-searching followed the separation of children from parents at the border, but the fury has failed to stop their indefinite detention in unprecedented numbers, against international law.  

 Being a refugee is not a choice. Those of us who are settled may never know the anxiety, risk or terror of those uprooted, the profound loss of what is left behind, and the daunting uncertainties ahead. Through these works, we explore encounters, intersections and perceptions between radically different worlds—between security and insecurity. 

We are moved by images. We are moved by words. We are grateful to novelists, poets, anthropologists and journalists who have informed our projects and whose words we have included or cited. Among them are Jenny Erpenbeck, Lev Golinkin, Eliza Griswold, Mohsin Hamid, David Hernandez, Ali Johar, Maria Melendez Kelson, Jason De León, Blas Manuel De Luna, Suketu Mehta, Dunya Mikhail, Yasser Niksada, Prageeta Sharma, Warsan Shire, Wisława Szymborska, and Vu Tran. 

Getting There suggests movement—but more than the literal movement of migrants and refugees. We hope Getting There advances an evolving ethos, a humane reception, an empathic embrace—and  movement of our own consciences.

RESORT : ANDREW ELLIS JOHNSON AND SUSANNE SLAVICK

The McDonough Museum of Art at Youngstown State University

September 7 – October 26, 2018

Public Reception, Friday, September 7, 5-7pm

Gallery Talk, Friday, September 7, 5 pm

New Immigrant and Refugee Visions screening, 6-7pm

The John J. McDonough Museum of Art, on the campus of Youngstown State University opens the fall season with RESORT, a traveling exhibition of works by Andrew Ellis Johnson and Susanne Slavick. It accompanies Sanctuary, an exhibition of paintings by John Guy Petruzzi. Both shows will be on view in the galleries September 7 – October 26 with an opening reception on Friday, September 7 from 5-7pm. Susanne Slavick and Andrew Ellis Johnson will give a gallery talk on the evening of the reception beginning at 5pm.

In addressing RESORT Slavick and Johnson comment: “Driven or displaced, cut loose or set adrift, or simply seeking safety—all are precarious states of passage. The decision to leave home may be voluntary or involuntary, arising from desperation or anticipation. RESORT, as a title, reflects that duality. To flee is a last resort. The destination is often another shore, literally or figuratively. The shore can also be a place for a benign kind of escape—an actual vacation resort. Some European vacationers have actually watched refugees wash ashore, from vessels both intact and capsized. We have similar scenarios on land at our own borders, worsened by recent separations of children from their families. RESORT explores the intersection of these two worlds—of security and insecurity— and our responses to those caught between them.”

 

In conjunction with RESORT, there will be several screenings from New Immigrant and Refugee Visions, produced by Community Supported Film. A preview screening will take place on Friday, September 7, 6-7pm. Additional screenings will take place from 12:30 to 1:30pm on September 11,14, 25, 28 and October 9, 12, 23 and 26. New Immigrant and Refugee Visions is a collection of documentary films made by new immigrants that provide unique insider perspectives on both the challenges of integration and the contributions immigrants make to our culture, economy and social fabric.

http://csfilm.org

McDonough galleries are open Tuesday through Saturday from 11am until 4pm.

Office hours are Monday through Friday from 8am to 5pm.

The Museum is open to the public and admission is free.

FEMINIST BORDER ARTS FILM FESTIVAL

RESORT, a video co-created with Andrew Ellis Johnson, is included in:

BORDER ZONES LIMINAL BODIES

New Mexico State University  Art Gallery

March 12, 2018 from 10am-6pm

A second screening event occurs on April 16, 2018 from 6pm-8:30pm at the CMI Theater Milton Hall 171 on the campus of NMSU. Sponsored by the Gender & Sexuality Studies, Interdisciplinary Studies Department, and the Creative Media Institute. 

FBAFF-VideoArt-Ad.jpg

No Vacation: 'Resort' is a voyage of ‘empathic unsettlement’

RESORT, a two person show by Andrew Ellis Johnson and Susanne Slavick at The Fed Galleries at Kendall College of Art and Design in Grand Rapids, Michigan, previewed in this REVUE article by Marla Miller.

Ark I, 2017, icon.jpg