Michael Pribich

New York, NY | Visual Artist | Resident in 2015

Michael Pribich was born and raised in Northern California.  He lives in New York City with his wife Esperanza Cortes.  He received a BA degree from Sacramento State University and MFA degree from Hunter College, NY. He is interested in the artist’s role in advancing ideas that lead to continual growth and change.    He explores the idea that labor can be viewed as cultural production, resulting in an expanded social space.

He has completed projects with the Public Works departments in Sacramento and Woodland, California.  2015-2018 projects and exhibitions include: Travel and study project locations include India, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Guadalajara and Hong Kong.    Solo exhibitions; Labor Days, Cuchifritos Gallery, NY, Centerfield, Webb School, Knoxville, Tn. Group exhibitions at the San Luis Obispo Museum of Art,  Bronx Museum of the Arts, Mocad, Detroit, Orange County Cultural Center and Flux Art Fair, NY. He was an artist resident at 360 Xochi Quetzal in Chapala Mexico, Jentel Residency, Sheridan, Wy; travel residencies in Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Guadalajara. 

In addition to producing artwork he has been employed as a forest firefighter, logger, prison instructor, house painter, waiter, art handler and art courier.  

My residency at 360 XQMX in summer 2015 was both restorative and productive.I was inspired by the beautiful studio and the surrounding Chapala / Jalisco region. The setting worked well for me in terms of inspiring and completing new work, and learning the history and customs of the area. The flexible residency requirements allowed an easy engagement with other residents, and encouraged me to participate in Chapala and Guadalajara communities. There are many contemporary art venues in Guadalajara, which are an easy bus ride from Chapala.
— Michael Pribich

Work by Michael Pribich

Lift, installation with used hand-trucks outfitted with chrome extensions, and support belt.   Lift was part of  the exhibition Backstitch at Verge Center for the Arts 2019-20 which culminated the  Ali Youssefi Project / Residency.    The residency and exhibition ended abruptly because the pandemic was beginning in the United States. A digital and hard copy catalog are available if you would like to see more.

Essential, 2020,  30 x 30 x 17″ (detail of larger installation with suspended gloves), brown cotton work gloves over steel rod armature .  Essential will be included in the upcoming exhibition Vida, Muerte, Justicia  (Life, Death, Justice) at the Ogden Contemporary Arts in October 2021.   Ogden Contemporary Arts . The show is curated by Jorge Rojas and Maria Del Mar Gonzalez. 

Black Support 2021, interlocking leather support belts suspended with chain.  Belts made with two color leather with sewn mirror inlay.  Black Support was made in May 2021 in Mexico  while participating in the 360 Xochi Quetzal Residency in Chapala and Guadalajara.   I work with talabartero (saddle maker) Victor Parra to make  support belts.
1521:  While in Guadalajara I did research on the history of African slaves brought to Mexico.  My mother’s family is from Chihuahua and I want to know more about this history.   Around the year 1521  Africans slaves  were brought to present day Vera Cruz to work as slave laborers including work in the silver mines and sugar cane fields.   This work continues with drawings and different versions of support belts. 

Paper Support, Work in progress using paper bags used for holding cement. The cement bags weigh 90 lbs, so the paper is heavy.  I will continue this work at  NARS RESIDENCY in Brooklyn beginning 7-1.     

I continue research into the movement of African slave into Mexico, around 1521, as well as NYC labor.   (Across the street from my Canal St studio is a Chinese pasta factory that each night  throws out huge bundles of brown paper bags used for holding 50lb flour sacks.)  Slave labor in Mexico, present day Chinese labor on Canal St are part of the under-recognized work force building the new world. 


In your artist statement you write: “The disparity between classes informs your use of materials….”

Mining the Pueblo is a series of art works that began at 360 Xochi Quetzal. I am still expanding and developing this body of work which utilizes synthetic recycled bags as an art material. These bags are mainly used in construction work to move dirt, bricks and refuse materials. The idea is: take a cheap common material and inject it with new meaning that emphasizes the fluidity and movement of this ‘low material‘ to a place of higher consideration. This is the opposite of using say gesso, canvas and oil paint – more traditional (European) materials – in favor of those specifically linked to the concept.  Mining the Pueblo places Mexico’s tradition of work and craft front and center as the concept itself. The leather panels on the bags were done by Victor Parra, a leather worker in Guadalajara, who comes from a family of saddle makers. They are the last generation of working Charros, which adds another layer of meaning and cultural reference. Victor’s contribution is to generate decorative patterns, which refer to vernacular imagery, in the leather stitching. I want the North American audience to look at these patterns as a reflection of its past history with Mexico, Central and South America, and the Caribbean. This history is not commonly taught or acknowledged in the USA, yet this country was built on the backs of slaves, on land taken from Native Americans, and land that was formerly Mexico in the present day western United States.

Some artists come to a residency with a particular creative game plan. Others just arrive open to whatever  inspires them at the moment. How did you approach your residency and how did your studio time compare to what you anticipated?

What I had anticipated and what resulted from my 360 Xochi Quetzal residency time could not have been further apart. I did not have a preconceived work plan, and did not have a high expectation for producing art works. I thought I would relax and read, and maybe have some Jalisco road trips to learn more about the local cowboy culture. What happened is that I was given an incredible opportunity – a great gift. The Lopez Cotilla residency house was so big and generous that I felt inspired to create new work. The people in Chapala work a lot, and that was an inspiration too. Seeing this dynamic fit into an idea that I had been thinking about for awhile. This concept, called The Infinite Labor of the Cosmic Race, is a body of work that is about immigrant Mexican workers in New York. The idea comes from the Mexican theorist Vasconcelos that claimed a kind of racial purity for Mexicans and posited them as a unique race. His theories are problematic, yet there are aspects of his thinking that attempts to lift the Mexican psyche.

You travel a great deal. Tell us about where you have been and how this has influenced your work.

I have been back to Guadalajara twice since my residency. I really connect there, and I want to continue to develop my Jalisco relationships.

I traveled to Tajikistan and Uzbekistan last fall. I have been traveling in Central Asia the last 4 years — a lifelong dream to see the Silk Road cities and other historic sites. This was my third trip, and the first time that I made art works that are specifically influenced by the place. I made a 5-minute video in the Pamir region of Tajikistan that features a farm worker processing wheat with a pitch fork. The video is slow motion and is accompanied by an Abby Lincoln and Max Roach soundtrack. The piece is about the repetition of work required for sustainable living. The Pamir people live amongst the extremely high mountains of Badakshan on the Pyaj River. Their way of life appears to have not changed much in over 2000 years (though they do carry cell phones -). Afghanistan is 100 yards away on the opposite bank of the river

I am currently participating in the Flux Art Fair in New York -­-‐ an outdoor sculpture fair in Harlem. My work Blue Elegy is informed by Zoroastrian and pre-Islamic, pre-Buddhist cultural and religious sites in Central Asia. These settings are often very plain with minimal markings, yet with enormous feeling and presence. Blue Elegy is a series of 12’ high poles made from broom handles on top of which are stainless steel mirror flags. Small bells are attached. Blue Elegy is about the gentrification of Harlem which is not only economic, but also racial and historic; it is the black and brown people of Harlem that are being pushed out. Blue Elegy is a kind of remembrance of the great people and their accomplishments of past and present day Harlem.

Tell us about recent and upcoming exhibitions or residencies.

This past year I’ve had works shown at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Detroit, and the Bronx River Art Center in the Bronx. Larger bag versions which incorporate repeating inset mirrors have been proposed to the NYC Parks Department, and to the Festival of Regions in Austria.I am currently working on promoting the works I have already done: I want to find a venue for the large mirror bags, for the Pamir video, and a new setting for Blue Elegy. I will be participating in the Jentel Artist Residency in Sheridan, Wyoming in June15 to July 15, 2016.

Where can we read about and see more of your work?

http://www.michaelpribich.com/

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