Issue 247
November/December 2024

Nobody told me that I couldn’t do what I wanted to do. Suzanne Jackson

The November/December issue of frieze is dedicated to artists and writers living and working in the American South. Jamey Hatley profiles Suzanne Jackson as she prepared for her much-anticipated solo show at Ortuzar Projects in New York. Plus, contributing writer Edna Bonhomme pens a thematic essay on the Caribbean diaspora in Miami.

Profile: Suzanne Jackson

‘Jackson’s pieces seem to change and morph before your eyes, exposing layers of found materials both manufactured and from the natural world.’ The artist looks back on her journey from Alaska to Savannah, weaving a rich tapestry of community building and artistic innovation.

Thematic Essay: Memories of Miami

‘Beneath the art-world glamour are stories of place and belonging interlaced with tragedy.’ Edna Bonhomme reflects on the economic and architectural changes of her hometown, depicted through art and film.

Also featuring  

Curators Kevin W. Tucker and Valerie Oliver Cassell speak to the ways the American South is leveraged by the art world in a wide-ranging conversation about the region. In ‘1,500 Words,’ writer and artist L. Kasimu Harris examines the legacies of photography of the American South. Plus, a roundtable discussion between Christian Ðinh, Tuan Mami, Tuan Andrew Nguyen and Arlette Quynh-Anh Tran which looks at the Vietnamese diaspora in the South.

Columns: Lay of the Land

Bryn Evans interviews Allison Janae Hamilton on the longstanding links between Blackness and geography in her practice; Jonas N.T. Becker uses photography to demystify extractivism in Appalachia; Lois Taylor Biggs highlights Marshallese navigation practices, tracing the community’s displacement in Northwest Arkansas due to US nuclear testing. Tanner Adell speaks with associate editor Marko Gluhaich about the storytelling potential of country music. Plus, Andrea Andersson outlines how Imani Jacqueline Brown and Jeremy Toussaint-Baptiste’s works visualize disappearing landscapes in Southeastern Louisiana.

Finally, on the occasion of Hannah Chalew’s Prospect.6 presentation, Louis Bury revisits her 2020 drawing Embodied Emissions. Plus, Suzanne Jackson contributes to our series of artists’ ‘to-do’ lists and senior editor Terence Trouillot pens a postcard from Santo Domingo.

From this issue

An exhibition at Crystal Bridges explores the impact of nuclear history while celebrating the vibrant culture of the Marshall Islands

BY Lois Taylor Biggs |

Jonas N.T. Becker on the overlooked persistence of extractivism in the region and its ongoing impact on communities and the environment

BY Jonas N.T. Becker |

In drawing, performance and sculpture, Imani Jacqueline Brown and Jeremy Toussaint-Baptiste reveal the scale of loss in the state

BY Andrea Andersson |

Four artists share how their connections to the Vietnamese diaspora – from New Orleans to Ho Chi Minh City – shape their storytelling

The photographer reflects on his connection to image-making in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina’s impact on New Orleans

BY L. Kasimu Harris |

Valerie Cassel Oliver and Kevin W. Tucker examine evolving perceptions of art from their region and its promising future

A writer reflects on her hometown, exploring its economic and architectural changes through art and film

BY Edna Bonhomme |

From Alaska to Savannah, the artist reflects on her six-decade career, innovative techniques and dedication to amplifying underrepresented voices in art

BY Jamey Hatley |

The musician shares her perspective on the genre’s vibrant and constantly evolving landscape

BY Tanner Adell AND Marko Gluhaich |

Ahead of her show at Marianne Boesky, New York, the artist discusses how kinfolk and ancestral landscapes have influenced her creative process

BY Bryn Evans |

Ahead of Prospect 6, we revisit the artist’s portrayal of Louisiana’s ‘Cancer Alley’ – its flora intertwined with petrochemical infrastructure

BY Louis Bury |

In a new show at Marta Herford, the photographers traverse archives and foreign lands to question what it really means to look

BY Talia Kwartler |

The artist's latest show at Francesca Minini, Milan, celebrates the defiance of the unconforming

BY Ana Vukadin |

A ‘survey’ of his upbringing, the artists hometown exhibition at Dallas’s Nasher Sculpture Center reimagines cafeteria furniture and science-class skeletons

BY Travis Diehl |

In his new solo show at Jan Kaps, Cologne, the artist’s eerie portraits interrogate capitalist consumption in the digital age

BY Krzysztof Kościuczuk |

A new exhibition at Sprüth Magers, London, showcases the artist’s distinctive style, reimagining animals and humans through layered forms and enigmatic reflections

BY Finn Blythe |

An urgent exhibition at Jane Lombard Gallery, New York, underscores the artist’s ongoing commitment to exploring migration and displacement

BY Clara Maria Apostolatos |

A solo exhibition at Galerie Gerhard Hofland, Amsterdam, showcases 92 paintings inspired by ancestral and archive photographs

BY Jim van Geel |

In her new exhibition at Carpintaria, Rio de Janeiro, the São Paulo artist contrasts the city’s lush landscape to her hometown’s concrete geometry

BY Mateus Nunes |

The artist’s exhibition at Marian Goodman Gallery, Paris, deepens her exploration of the emotional and financial economies of art 

BY Andrew Hodgson |

The artist’s hyperdetailed depictions of everyday clutter at Standard (Oslo) explore the significance of labour-intensive drawing in an era of effortless image-production

BY Nicholas Norton |

Featuring an expanded video installation and wall-mounted works incorporating solar cells, the artists show at SCAI The Bathhouse, Tokyo, emphasizes presence

BY Maki Nishida |

An unsettling outdoor performance in Edinburgh combines live and pre-recorded voices to directly confront Conservative MP Suella Braverman’s incendiary rhetoric

BY Lou Selfridge |

At Julia Stoschek Foundation, Dusseldorf, a survey of the artist’s mixed-media work explores surveillance, selfhood and technology

BY Emily McDermott |

The artist’s first institutional survey at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art assembles her eclectic ceramics, some of which she made with her husband

BY Will Fenstermaker |

Featuring a new commission, the artist’s show at Dia Bridgehampton asks how viewing conditions and context shape perception

BY Macaella Gray |

At South London Gallery, the artist weaves folklore, history and personal narratives into a vibrant tapestry exploring cultural identity and imagination

BY Ajeet Khela |

The capacious theme of this seven-artist show at Silverlens, New York, invites affinities outside of the basis of identity

BY Hindley Wang |

At Bel Ami, Los Angeles, a show pairing Covey Gong and Monique Mouton questions networks of value in commercial galleries

BY Claudia Ross |

A survey exhibition at Museum der Moderne Salzburg makes evident that the artist’s creative home has always been the stage

BY Madeleine Freund |

At the Whitechapel Gallery in London, the artist’s haunting sculptures examine the lingering impacts of colonialism and the enduring weight of the past on diasporic futures

BY Jamila Abdel-Razek |