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"Freedom Love" at WHAAM!

Using colors that are simultaneously “too dark and too bright,” Dorrey unveils a “fragile utopia amidst digital chaos” where “Black joy emerges even within the bounds of a grotesque haze.” On the other hand, Ramales’ playful assemblages combine "emblems of faith, cartoons, and imagery from the artist’s everyday life" to tell stories that straddle the balance between fantasy and reality.

 

Made on his phone, Dorrey’s exaggerated photo manipulations and distorted characters evoke the familiar haze of memories squeezed into the fanciful confines of a dream, while Ramales’ cartoonish depictions take on an unexpected realism. Ramales often combines painting with found objects. His love letters on old composition notebook paper and figurative depictions place an emphasis on “Mexican and American working-class iconography and totems of Roman Catholicism”, while drawing from accessible cultural references. Alongside one another, Dorrey and Ramales' bodies of work, while different in style and reference, seem to tell separate parts of the same story.

 

See for yourself at 15 Elizabeth St #113, New York, NY 10013.

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