Nostalgia, says the artist Adam Pendleton, isn't really my vibe. Perhaps Pendleton's reluctance to look sentimentally at the past isn't all that surprising; he seems to favor a stripped-down view in both his practice and his surroundings.
He calls his artistic philosophy Black Dada, melding avant-garde with theories of Blackness in abstract paintings and drawings. The works provide a direction rather than clarity, encouraging exploration and newness.
In his exhibition at Pace Gallery, Pendleton's Black Dada pieces evolve with new colors, maintaining a visual vocabulary while striving for innovation and departure from the familiar.
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