Sign up for our newsletter

Stay informed on our latest news!

The Contemplations of Jade Thacker

office spoke with Jade about the experience of getting a solo show in New York, her progress from print making to painting, and the different mediums and scenes she plans to expand into next, which are certain to excite.

Hi Jade.

 

Hey!

 

How are you today?

 

I’m doing pretty good today, how are you? 

 

I'm good! What have you been thinking about these days?

 

Lately, I’ve been thinking a lot about how paralyzing fear is, how attached to social media we’ve become, and how addicted to my phone I am. It’s a lot [laughs].

 

How has the reception of your show been so far?

 

The show has gotten a lot of great responses, I’m very happy about that.

 

This is your first solo show, how did that come about?

 

It was in the works for a bit. The gallery had found my work on Instagram at the beginning of summer and wanted to start a back and forth. At the time I was just working out of my apartment. We set up a FaceTime so they could see the work and they really liked it and wanted to move forward. After selling a good amount of work through them in a little over a month I was able to get myself a studio space that freed me up in terms of scale. At that point, I just put in a lot of time into being in the studio and the gallery liked the work a lot and it just sort of happened from there.

What’s it like having your own show? What has happened that you didn’t expect?

 

This solo show has been an incredible experience, I had no idea how everything would turn out and it’s super nerve-wracking putting work that's so personal to you out into the world. I was totally surprised that the show sold out the day before it even opened. It’s been a mind trip.

 

You graduated from Mass College of the Arts in 2014 as a printmaker. What was it like learning at Massart?

 

Massart has a great printmaking program. It’s very intense, you can’t really half-ass printmaking. I mean you can and there were plenty of times that I did to an extent, but even then there’s so many chemicals and steps to follow that you have to pay attention to for safety reasons, and you’re dealing with big machinery, so it takes a level of seriousness and focus. It’s science. We were all big nerds about it. I was partial to lithography and etching. Actually, because of the show, a print publisher approached me about doing a printmaking project which will be my first serious printing project since graduating. I’m very excited about that.

 

How has your background in printmaking affected your relationship with painting?

 

Printmaking made me see things in layers. And it also made me more open to what’s out of my control. You’re dealing with these chemicals and leaving copper in acid for a certain specific amount of time and sometimes things come out differently than you intended and sometimes that’s the most beautiful part. I look at painting that way. I like to plan to a degree and then after a certain point when enough of my intended information is on the surface, it’s gotta start to do its own thing. When I find myself unable to let it do that is usually when I’m struggling.

 

What has the painting life been like for you since you graduated?

 

After I graduated there were 2-3 years that I didn’t really create anything seriously. I think coming out of an academic setting and also just life kind of stifled me. I started creating again without any reason other than it just making sense, it’s second nature. Painting was the easiest medium for me to use inside my apartment. I’d work pretty religiously on paintings on my days off from bartending. It was how I recentered and how maintained my inner dialogue.

 

Who do you feel are your greatest influences? What do you go to for inspiration?

 

Some big influences for me across all mediums are Francis Bacon, Belkis Ayón, Egon Schiele, Toni Morrison, Danny Senna, Bell Hooks, Joe Henderson, Herbie Hancock, Stevie Wonder. Music and literature are a major influence. In the studio, I play a lot of different stuff but usually, I like to play music that takes your mind somewhere. Herbie Hancock’s “Headhunters” is great. Max Roach has this song called “Garvey’s Ghost” that really absorbs you into a sense of purpose. That’s the point.

 

For inspiration, I usually write things down that I feel are important or will be of use later. A lot of it consists of short two, maybe three-word phrases that I think are funny in some way but also personal. They sound vague often but they all have personal meaning. Eventually, they’ll start to flesh out into something visual. Sometimes they don't and it's whatever. I try not to be tragic about when stuff isn’t working. I mean it feels that way sometimes though.

Much of your work is oil on wood panel, what is the relationship you see between oil and wood paneling? What does it allow for?

 

I like the wood panel because it's a hard smooth surface. I can draw and paint and draw on top of the paint and dig and carve into the paint in a way that's really satisfying for me, probably goes back to how I like working in layers.

 

What’s the relationship between movement and your painting style?

 

Movement is usually relevant in the figures in my pieces. They’re usually somewhat contorted or caught awkwardly in the middle of some action or realization. In a general sense, movement is related because I can use my own body as a vehicle for whatever type of energy into the strokes and gestures. In that sense, that movement is in some of the pieces more than others. Sometimes I work super gestural and then pull back and work very tightly. I like tension.

 

Are there projects you’re waiting for the opportunity to begin? Where do you want your practice to evolve toward next?

 

I’d love to do a project in LA next. I’d also love to explore sculpture, experiment with that as well. That would be great.

Confirm your age

Please confirm that you are at least 18 years old.

I confirm Whooops!