Sable Elyse Smith: Ordinary Violence

August 17, 2018 to January 27, 2019

Using video, sculpture, photography and text, (b. 1986, Los Angeles, California) draws attention to the structures and systems that shape our lives. Smith points to the carceral, the personal, the political, and the quotidian to speak about a violence that is largely unseen鈥攁nd potentially imperceptible.

Smith鈥檚 poetic, conceptualist approach seeks to make visible and visceral the effects of systemic exertions of trauma. Whether focusing our attention on specific systems of surveillance and structures of constraint or on the silent brutality that permeates everyday black life, many of Smith鈥檚 works connect us to her personal experience.

Some works speak directly to the prison and criminal justice systems as sites, at once familiar and foreign to many. A poetic text-object describes the protocols for prison visitation; a photographic object exposes the microeconomy built around inmate-visitor portraits; a found object, coloring book pages designed for children entering courtrooms, is scribbled on and scaled up; another found object, the kind of aluminum table common in prisons,  is transformed into a monumental arch.

Other works point obliquely to the experience of subjected individuals and communities. A neon text referencing the internet phenomenon of 鈥減lanking鈥 asks us to consider the viral circulation of images of other bodies, facedown. A video of fragmented, non-narrative imagery weaves together generic, 鈥渦rban鈥 street scenes; footage of two white men undergoing tactical firearm training; excerpts from Charles and Ray Eames鈥 1977 documentary, Powers of 10; and scenes of Smith鈥檚 father.

Whatever form it takes, Smith鈥檚 work attempts to materialize and aestheticize the words, sounds, gestures, and embodied experiences that characterize far-reaching cycles of violence and systems of control. As notes in her catalogue essay, Smith鈥攊n making these conditions noticeable and felt鈥攅ncourages us to 鈥渞eshape our perceptual, affective, and embodied modes of attention.鈥 The artist provides a portal and invites us to pass through these emotional landscapes. She asks us to see with the hope that what we encounter cannot be unseen.


Support for this exhibition and accompanying programs is provided by the:

  • Beatrice Haggerty Endowment Fund,
  • Eleanor H. Boheim Endowment Fund,
  • Frederick A. and Mary Ellen Muth Program Endowment,
  • Haggerty Museum Sommerich Fund,
  • Joan Pick Endowment Fund,
  • Lillian Rojtman Berkman Endowment Fund,
  • 向日葵视频 Women鈥檚 Council Endowment Fund,
  • Martha and Ray Smith, Jr. Endowment Fund,
  • Mary Martha Doerr Endowment Fund,
  • Nelson Goodman Endowment Fund,
  • Richard P. Herzfeld Endowment Fund,
  • Spicuzza/Hambling Quasi-Endowed Fund,
  • Stackner Family Endowment Fund,
  • and
  • , with funds from the and the .