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Shaniqwa Jarvis Meditates on Self and Place

“I intentionally worked towards showing this side of me,” Jarvis says over our midday Zoom call from her Los Angeles home. “I want to touch on being new to my space, and also reflecting on what home is. I remember when I was younger, like in high school, I was watching this PBS documentary about what your home says about you. There was some quote, ‘when you look outside, your surroundings will inspire you and will create who you are going to be.’” For her at the time, that meant tapping into the life transitions at play around her, from growing older to settling into a new home in Northeast Los Angeles.   

 

Jarvis is known for her capability of creating portraits that are captivating and emotional. She is most likely the lens behind some of your favorite recent magazine covers, former President Barack Obama for InStyle; Black Panther’s Letitia Wright, Danai Gurira and Lupita Nyong’o for Elle; and Pusha T for our very own last summer.

The exhibition opened at the end of last month, studying the interplay of light and shadows while capturing the emotional portraits of the everyday mundane motifs of California cast under gloomy melancholy weather: vintage cars, fenced-off community pools, neighborhood flowers, and concrete underpasses. For Jarvis, walking around these Los Angeles neighborhoods practicing breathwork and having the space to connect back to herself after intensive periods of working was transformative. This intimate body of work embraces the discomfort of tuning inwards, acknowledging it as a stepping stone to understanding our sense of place and what might be confining us. 

 

Jarvis dances between coexisting as both the photographer and subject, with the roles serving as a reflection of each other. The space in itself showcases an extensive self-portrait––collages of a young Jarvis, photos of present-day flowers held in her hand, and the visual diary of the landscape that is home to her. 

 

Jarvis explains, “It's just not me, but it's how I feel and how I see myself; how I see myself today; and how I saw myself two days ago. It's all very much an extension of myself.”

Everywhere You Go There You Are brings together photography alongside collages and painted textiles. No stranger to these mediums, Jarvis worked with printing photographs on varying fabrics for around the last six years. She approaches this task with curiosity and openness to dig further. Jarvis explains, “I just was like okay, it's time to combine all of the Shaniqwa into one. This was the first exploration of that. So this is the first time I've done a collage in this way. It’s the first time that I've done painting on textiles that I've made.” The multi-faceted artist worked with her friend, Paige Cleaveland of Rule of Three Studio to bring these textile ideas to life, leaning onto themes mentioned earlier like transitioning into a new place and connecting back to her younger self. 

 

Accompanying the various landscapes are collages with portraits of a younger Jarvis and photos she’s taken back then, placed in the center wall of the gallery like an altar, honoring the innocence of youth and how that inner child still exists today. Jarvis reflects, “When I started working on the show, I was like, ‘Oh wait, like, here are some things that I did, like photographs I took when I was younger. And look, I'm still taking those same things now.’ And that kind of led into the title of the show, no matter where you go there you are, because it's true.” 

 

Our conversation always found its back to the idea of honoring––honoring the ancestors who came before her and paved this path for her, honoring younger Jarvis and how she is still connected to her today, and especially honoring the local community around her in a manner that was “real and authentic.” With her first solo show debuting in Los Angeles, the artist emphasized the intent to work with as many creatives in LA in the process. From working with Blossom Liu on designing the cover of the limited edition 52-page catalog zine to pair with the exhibition and printing it locally to creating a merchandise long-sleeve tee with Los Angeles-born apparel brand, SUPERVSN.

 

Everywhere You Go There You Are is on display at CONTROL Gallery from July 29, 2023 - August 26, 2023, located at 434 N La Brea Ave, Los Angeles.

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