Jan 25—May 03, 2017
Jesse krimes, et al
made in america
"Curated by Amy Halliday
January 25—March 3, 2017
Opening reception: February 2, 5-8pm. Remarks at 6pm, refreshments will be served.
On September 9, 2016, incarcerated individuals across the United States embarked on the first national prison labor strike in US history, timing the action to coincide with the famous Attica prison rebellion of 1971. Despite increasing media and scholarly attention to the unprecedented rise in incarceration over the past four decades, many remain unaware of the complex and interrelated incentives that underlie this uniquely American phenomenon, a system “Made in America.”
The 13th Amendment to the US constitution outlawed slavery and involuntary servitude, but it retained an exception for unfree labor as “a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted.” This exception opened the path for the convict leasing and chain gang labor that supported rapid industrialization in the American South. Today, in the age of mass incarceration, this exception underpins multiple forms of economic exploitation, in which incarcerated folks – disproportionately low income people of color – are employed at cents per hour, with no benefits.
The work programs put in place by Congress in 1979 claimed to provide marketable skills for reintegration. While some fulfill this mandate, many are merely a rhetorical veil by which state governments employ cheap labor to produce goods (from office furniture to military gear) and provide services (such as firefighting or snow shovelling) to offset their budgets. Private corporations garner profit and political capital by “in-sourcing” their labor to prisons rather than out-sourcing overseas. Simultaneously, incarcerated people largely lack the consumer choice of people on the outside: every day they confront monopoly prices, from commissary goods to telephone services, and must navigate myriad legal and healthcare fees, family support and restitution payments.
Made in America features the work of artists and activists, inside and outside prison, exposing faultlines between exploitative economic interests and the creative and intellectual labor of incarcerated individuals and returned citizens. These works offer powerful articulations of subjecthood and resistance in the face of a dehumanizing system. Bringing together diverse artistic projects, the exhibition investigates the value of human capital, and coerced and creative labor in an advanced capitalist society."
EXHIBITION IMAGES

Jesse Krimes’ work, including the shipping boxes that were used to smuggle his work out of prison.

People at the exhibition opening in front of Jesse Krimes work

Gallery Director Amy Halliday speaking with featured artist Jared Owens at the exhibition opening.


People at an opening!

A selection of suggested readings to go along with the exhibition



Video installation still of “Well-Contested Sites,” 2013, short film (14 minutes)

Sheila Pinkel, Criminal Eyes, Human Eyes, 2016