White Cube New York presents ‘Hold Me, Hold Me, Hold Me’, a solo exhibition by Theaster Gates, in which the artist creates a series of material pairings - across painting, sculpture, and archival installation - indicative of musical harmonic devices. Shifting the ideology of art from visually based to metronomic, Gates explores how sound holds pain and suffering, joy, temporality, memory, and contingency.

Engaging with the history of built environments, craftsmanship, and music, Gates transforms the gallery space into a tableau of personal and collective memory – an immersive homage to the community. With music serving as a through line in Gates’s practice, the exhibition’s title honors the 1970s duet ‘Be Real Black For Me’ by librettists Donny Hathaway and Roberta Flack. Drawing from an evocative, emotional crescendo midway through the song – marked by the echoed repetition of the phrase ‘hold me’ – Gates explores the connections between music, composition, and the complex interactions between artistry and mental health, acknowledging the truth of Hathaway’s profound struggles with fame and creative transmission during his lifetime.

Foregrounding the inherently personal act of memorialization, Gates’s large-scale sculptural work, Sweet Sanctuary, Your Embrace (2023), pays tribute to his father’s craft as a roofer by incorporating roofing techniques to layer and tar the piano with bitumen. Elevated on a marble plinth, Gates exalts this personal relic into an object of reverence. Sublimated from a dynamic state to one of muteness, the process dually realizes the preservation of the instrument and the cessation of its functionality. ‘For the piano to live forever, it has to be rendered unplayable’, the artist notes, ‘To use the thing is to destroy it; to shelve it is to ensure an extending of its life.’

Similarly, transposing industrial materials and roofing techniques, Gates’s new tar paintings push the materiality of the tar and foreground the process, allowing it to articulate its narrative. These compositions suggest a more formal quality, manifesting divisions of color that evoke landscape terrains and marry industrial material with self-referential imagery.

In his holistic approach to craft, Gates’s work addresses issues of erasure within labor practices, making visible the intricacies and commemorating the histories of craftsmanship. The sink sculpture Radical Prioritizing: 1840s Style (2010) belongs to a series of works that establishes a dialogue between Gates and Dave Drake (‘Dave the Potter’), an enslaved potter from South Carolina, known for signing and inscribing his clay works with poetic couplets.

In continuation of his earlier series, the ‘Whyte Paintings’, Radical Prioritizing: 1840s Style comprises a cast iron Kohler sink inscribed with a quote from one of the songs of Dave the Potter. Crafted during his residency at the Kohler manufacturing company, the work functions as a reflection on the story of Dave the Potter and the broader dynamics of race and craft. Gates states, ‘Catfish Fresh (Radical Prioritizing: 1840s Style), the object, the animal, the house, the land – all more important than the person who built it and the person who preserves it, the person who tills it, the person who cooks it.’

Within the second floor of the gallery, a suite of three multi-part installations draws from the archival holdings of the Johnson Publishing Company (JPC), the Chicago-based publisher established in 1942. Renowned for producing Ebony and Jet, two iconic lifestyle magazines that became fixtures in Black households across the US, Gates recreates the interior office spaces of JPC, replicating the original cleated paneling. Remarking on the office spaces as he first encountered them, Gates notes, ‘The panels were both aesthetic and sound buffering. They felt like they were doing the primary work of creating the energy of the space […] each floor had a different colored panel, different series wallpaper, and the wallpaper, flooring and ceiling were all related in color and symbology.’

In Encyclopedia Blacktannia (2023), Gates curates a selection of ephemera acquired from the JPC archives, including its original office plaque and boxes housing archival copies of Jet and Ebony. Accompanying these items is a chair salvaged by Gates from Crispus Attucks Elementary School before its demolition in 2018, which the artist has recast in bronze as an act of preservation. In another vignette, entitled Credit Union Office (2023), set against a backdrop of black cloth paneling, Gates’s part-archival sculpture Self-cleaning Stack (2012–19) features a brush whose wooden handle takes the form of a Mammy figure, an archetypal image of a Black woman.

This brush was sourced from the Edward J Williams collection of ‘negrobilia’ – a group of objects depicting Black individuals in racist, stereotypical ways, collated by Williams as a way to remove them from the market. In repositioning and recontextualizing the brush, Gates not only addresses the ways we engage with depictions of the Black female form but also explores the role women have played in the articulation of male dignity. The brush, serving the practical purpose of cleaning lint, itself stands as an indicator of professionalism and pride in presentation at JPC. As the artist has said: ‘That suit, for me, is both praising the dignity of Johnson Publishing and making a critique of the kind of subjugated role that women continue to play.’

A third work, 11th Floor with Triangle and Mask (2023) is comprised of four red fabric panels adorned with an original JPC office plaque from the 11th floor of the JPC building, which was the personal penthouse of the company’s founder, John H Johnson. Assembled on a salvaged marble base, the installation features a triangular black ceramic sculpture by Gates and an Igbo mask. It is one of a series of bronze casts created by the artist from wooden African masks in the JPC collection. Much like the chair, the bronze casting functions as an act of conservation – a way for the artist to give form to memory.

Casting a sovereign presence within the same floor space, ‘The Duet’ comprises two bronze vessels that tower nearly ten feet high. Through their vast scale, Gates honors the legacy of ceramics, evoking a time when property lines were demarcated by a stone or clay disc and gravestones were plotted with ceramic vessels. Working with the original vessels, Gates invests in the symbolic potency of the object and its communicative potential. Here, bronze preserves the personal and spiritual significance of clay, protecting the layered histories of the material.

To celebrate the musical influences that have informed the exhibition, Gates will stage an intimate critical listening session with musicians and scholars, featuring speakers Matthew Morrison and DJ Reborn. The event will include songs by Donny Hathaway and Roberta Flack, as well as other soul artists who were part of Atlantic Records during the 1960s and ’70s. Coalescing the past 15 years of Gates’s socially engaged practice as an artist, archivist, and urban planner, the exhibition stands as a dedication to both the rich legacies and irreducible influence of Black culture and craft.

Theaster Gates (b.1973, Chicago, Illinois) has exhibited widely, including solo exhibitions at LUMA Foundation, Arles, France (2023); New Museum, New York (2022); Serpentine Pavilion, London (2022); Frederick Kiesler Foundation, Vienna (2022); Whitechapel Gallery, London (2021); Victoria & Albert Museum, London (2021); TANK Shanghai (2021); Prada Rhong Zhai, Shanghai (2021); Spelman College Museum of Fine Art, Atlanta, Georgia (2020); Tate Liverpool, UK (2020); Haus der Kunst, Munich, Germany (2019); Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, Minnesota (2019); Martin Gropius Bau, Berlin (2019); Palais de Tokyo, Paris (2019); Fondazione Prada, Milan (2018); Kunstmuseum Basel (2018); Sprengel Museum, Hannover (2018); National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. (2017); Art Gallery of Ontario, Toronto (2016); Fondazione Prada, Milan, Italy (2016); Kunsthaus Bregenz, Austria (2016); Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago, Illinois (2013); Whitechapel Gallery, London (2013); Seattle Art Museum, Washington, DC (2011); Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles , California (2011); Milwaukee Art Museum, Wisconsin (2010); and St. Louis Art Museum, Missouri (2010).

Gates has participated in many group exhibitions including the 18th International Architecture Biennale, Venice (2023); Brooklyn Museum, New York (2023); Punta della Dogana – Pinault Collection, Venice (2023); Sharjah Biennial 15, UAE (2023); The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York (2022); Aichi Triennale, Tokoname City, Japan (2022); Mississippi Museum of Art, Jackson, Mississippi (2022); New Museum, New York (2021); Virginia Museum of Fine Arts and Crystal Bridges Museum, Arkansas (2021); San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, California (2020); Whitney Museum of American Art, New York (2017); 14th Istanbul Biennial (2015); 56th Venice Biennale (2015); Prospect 3, New Orleans, Louisiana (2014); Documenta 13, Kassel, Germany (2012); and Whitney Biennial, New York (2010).

Gates is the recipient of numerous awards and honorary degrees including the Isamu Noguchi Award (2023); the Friedrich Kiesler Prize for Architecture and Art (2021); the Royal Institute of British Architects (2021); the World Economic Forum Crystal Award (2020); J.C. Nichols Prize for Visionaries in Urban Development (2018); Nasher Sculpture Prize (2018); Sprengel Museum Kurt Schwitters Prize (2017); and Artes Mundi 6 prize (2015). In April 2018 Gates was appointed the first distinguished visiting artist and Director of Artist Initiatives at the Lunder Institute for American Art, Colby College, Waterville, Maine. He was the visiting artist in residence at the American Academy in Rome (2020); and was inducted into the American Academy of Arts and Letters in 2021.