Kayode Ojo
Greater New York
Group Exhibition
October 7, 2021 to April 18, 2022
MoMA PS1, New York, NY, United States
Exhibition Text
Greater New York, MoMA PS1’s signature survey of artists living and working in the New York City area, returns for its fifth edition. Delayed one year due to the COVID-19 pandemic, this iteration offers an intimate portrayal of New York City, forging connections between often under-examined histories of art-making in the city.
Featuring the work of 47 artists and collectives, Greater New York opens up geographic and historical boundaries by expanding familiar narratives around artists and art movements in New York. Bridging strategies of the documentary and the archive on the one hand, and surrealism and fabulation on the other, the exhibition considers the ways that artists record experiences of belonging and estrangement. Drawing connections across the interdisciplinary practices of international and intergenerational artists, Greater New York examines the many ways that affinities are formed in relation to place and through time.
The exhibition foregrounds the resilience of artists and artist communities in the city, while marking ways these artists have both profoundly shaped New York, and borne witness to its many transformations. As New York emerges from the COVID-19 pandemic, the exhibition offers an opportunity to mourn, celebrate, and reconnect with artist communities. This iteration of Greater New York honors not only the persistence of artists, many of whom have worked unrecognized over decades, but their ability to help us make sense of the many ruptures—social, political, and ecological—that have shaped New York City in this critical and transformative moment.
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Artist Biography
Kayode Ojo’s practice emerges from a filtering of the clothing, furniture, musical instruments, cameras, faux-luxury objects, and popular media that are encountered in everyday life. His sculptures are precariously balanced arrangements of such found objects atop glass and mirrors or in readymade cages, often titled after film and theater references, performing a delicate double-duty as both consumer good and artwork. Ojo’s photographs are drawn from a decades-long archive of candid, spontaneous captures, documenting moments of performativity late at night.
Ojo (*1990, United States) lives and works in New York. He has presented three solo exhibitions at Sweetwater, most recently in 2024. Other recent solo exhibitions have taken place at Maureen Paley and 52 Walker. His work is featured in the permanent collections of the Hessel Museum of Art, Museum Brandhorst, Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, the Stedelijk Museum, and the Studio Museum. Ojo received a BFA from the School of Visual Arts, New York, in 2012.