Francesse Dolbrice
8

November 8–December 21, 2024

Press Release

White Columns is pleased to present 8, the debut solo exhibition by the New York-based artist Francesse Dolbrice (b. 1995, Port-au-Prince, Haiti.) Embracing ceramics, sculpture, drawing and textiles, Dolbrice’s work, when seen in its totality, is a multidisciplinary investigation of the systems — biological, psychological, neurological, philosophical, etc. — through which the artist comprehends their interactions with the surrounding world. About their work, Dolbrice has said: “As a cartographer maps out an atlas, I map out the neurodivergence and subtle ingestions that my brain experiences during different emotional moments, and cognition. Making sure to note both the similarities and the differences of the ‘terrain’, the ‘bodies of water’, the ‘atmosphere’, and the ‘ecosystem’ of every region.”

Throughout Dolbrice’s exhibition, fragile materials — e.g. paper, ceramic — interact with sturdier forms of shaped and carved wood. Though delicate, the forms are suggestive of more solid things to come, operating like sketches, models or blueprints. In one sculpture, a shaped piece of paper wraps over, around and under a wooden frame, effectively containing the form we might have expected to contain it. Other shaped paper structures extend like cornices from the wall behind, as if supporting the frame, which hovers suspended just out of their reach. In another wall-based work a folded paper shape extends from the bottom of a drawing. The sparse lines of the drawing suggest three-dimensionality, and are interrupted by a fuzzy pastel arch, like a shimmering portal to another realm. The suggestion of something beyond that which meets the eye recurs in the structure underneath the drawing, which has the appearance of a box with flaps folded inward, so that the interior of the shape is partially obscured: revealed and hidden in the same gesture.

Throughout their practice, Dolbrice manages to both explicate and obfuscate questions of legibility and meaning-making. Though the forms and figures that comprise 8 stem from actual sensorial experiences seen and felt by the artist, a direct explanation of this private meaning is invariably withheld from the viewer, so that a visitor to the gallery will essentially encounter each piece on its own terms. Dolbrice hopes that the work done by the viewer in reacting to the exhibition will serve as, in their words, “a form of leveling labor, as well as a way to form connectivity with specific audiences.” Seeing the work for the first time, one has the sense of encountering the distillation of a vast, dense system of meaning that can be grasped only in parts. In this sense, the physical forms that emerge from Dolbrice’s personal cosmology function like ciphers, formed in translation: a language system created by the artist that gains an additional layer of meaning via the viewer’s interpretation of it.

The fluidity and openness afforded by abstraction also appeals to the artist as a means of safeguarding parts of their personal identity. They are wary of the figurative and even of representation itself, keenly aware that presenting anything approaching a literal “self portrait” inherently risks that image being co-opted or exploited.  Abstraction, then, provides a site for investigation into the self cloaked in a certain intentional opacity. Constrained by an almost hermetic set of symbols and formulations meant to express an interior geology, Dolbrice has constructed and choreographed an exploration of selfhood that is made all the more vivid by its strangeness.

 


 

Francesse Dolbrice is a multidisciplinary Sculptor and Drafter, whose work analyzes ideas of perception, existence, and identity through interwoven methodologies. Entranced by the tension that arises when one faces the question of “what is reality?” and the complexities that put the validity of this question in flux. They are compelled to depict thoughtful layers of archival research through orchestration. Francesse uses their practice as a form of grounding and connection, tuning their own specificities in an approach for clarity. A Haitian both in theoretical traditions and ethnicity, they are developing a practice that is aligned with bodily knowledge and terrestrial positioning.

This exhibition is accompanied by a new text by the artist, copies of which are available at the gallery.

 


 

For more information about this exhibition, please contact info@whitecolumns.org

For press inquiries, contact violet@whitecolumns.org

A view of a series of abstract sculptures and drawings hung on and around several white walls in a gallery. To the left on the rear wall are two horizontally-oriented colorful abstract drawings on large sheets of white paper. Two abstract sculptures made of paper, wood and glazed ceramic are installed on the floor. An abstract sculpture composed of wood, glazed ceramic and paper shapes is installed on the freestanding wall to the right.
A view of two gallery walls meeting at an angle. On the left wall are three abstract sculptures composed of wood, glazed ceramic and paper. On the right wall is a large unframed abstract drawing with sparse colorful shapes on the left half and a denser, vivid explosion of colors on the right side.
A view of a wall in a gallery. The wall has a brick archway in the middle of it. To the left of the archway is a wall-mounted abstract sculpture of an arrangement of wood, glazed ceramic and paper. To the right are two more wall-mounted sculptures. One is made of white paper with a drawing on the upper portion; the bottom portion extends out from the wall like an upside-down periscope. The sculpture furthest to the right is a shaped wood panel with several white and pale green fabric shapes attached to its edges.
Two large abstract drawings hung on a white wall. The drawings are unframed and on white paper. The drawing to the left is a large unframed abstract drawing with sparse colorful shapes on the left half and a denser, vivid explosion of colors on the left side. The drawing on the right has a background of thin graphite pencil strokes that forms a series of lines and geometric shapes. Atop and among this grid, colored pencil and pastel marks interplay in an array of muted green, blue and red tones.
A view of a freestanding white wall in a gallery. Hung on the wall is an abstract sculpture composed of wood, glazed ceramic and paper shapes. Installed on the floor to the left are two abstract sculptures made of wood bases with shaped paper on top; the sculpture to the rear also includes ceramic pieces that rest on top of the wood base.
(A series of abstract sculptures and drawings hung on and around several white walls in a gallery. Hung in the middle of the freestanding wall closest to the viewer is an abstract wall-mounted sculpture composed of a wooden frame surrounded by shaped white paper. Installed on the floor to the right of this wall is a geometric shaped paper sculpture atop a triangular wooden plinth. On the wall behind are two horizontally-oriented abstract drawings on large sheets of white paper. Installed on the floor to the right of these drawings are two lower sculptures composed of wood, paper and ceramic.)
A sculpture mounted on a white wall. The sculpture is composed of an arrangement of oddly shaped ceramic, small shaped paper drawings and wooden dowels that appear to “support” the ceramic shapes at uncanny angles. The overall palette is a mix of pastels and muddier tones of greens, purples and browns. Hung on the wall beneath the sculpture is its “title,” which is a small white ceramic rectangle with a smaller rectangle of navy blue glaze in the upper righthand corner.
A profile view of a wall-mounted abstract sculpture. The sculpture is composed of four shaped paper components with cubic bases that extend out from the wall. They are hung such that they appear to be supporting a wooden frame, which hangs from near-invisible clear cords to hover in front of the paper forms. A piece of shaped paper with an abstract drawing on it is hung just behind the frame; the edges of the paper come up and around the frame.

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024. (A view of a series of abstract sculptures and drawings hung on and around several white walls in a gallery. To the left on the rear wall are two horizontally-oriented colorful abstract drawings on large sheets of white paper. Two abstract sculptures made of paper, wood and glazed ceramic are installed on the floor. An abstract sculpture composed of wood, glazed ceramic and paper shapes is installed on the freestanding wall to the right.)

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024. (A view of two gallery walls meeting at an angle. On the left wall are three abstract sculptures composed of wood, glazed ceramic and paper. On the right wall is a large unframed abstract drawing with sparse colorful shapes on the left half and a denser, vivid explosion of colors on the right side.)

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024. (A view of a wall in a gallery. The wall has a brick archway in the middle of it. To the left of the archway is a wall-mounted abstract sculpture of an arrangement of wood, glazed ceramic and paper. To the right are two more wall-mounted sculptures. One is made of white paper with a drawing on the upper portion; the bottom portion extends out from the wall like an upside-down periscope. The sculpture furthest to the right is a shaped wood panel with several white and pale green fabric shapes attached to its edges.)

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024. (Two large abstract drawings hung on a white wall. The drawings are unframed and on white paper. The drawing to the left is a large unframed abstract drawing with sparse colorful shapes on the left half and a denser, vivid explosion of colors on the left side. The drawing on the right has a background of thin graphite pencil strokes that forms a series of lines and geometric shapes. Atop and among this grid, colored pencil and pastel marks interplay in an array of muted green, blue and red tones.)

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024. (A view of a freestanding white wall in a gallery. Hung on the wall is an abstract sculpture composed of wood, glazed ceramic and paper shapes. Installed on the floor to the left are two abstract sculptures made of wood bases with shaped paper on top; the sculpture to the rear also includes ceramic pieces that rest on top of the wood base.)

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024.

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024.

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024.

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024.

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024. (A series of abstract sculptures and drawings hung on and around several white walls in a gallery. Hung in the middle of the freestanding wall closest to the viewer is an abstract wall-mounted sculpture composed of a wooden frame surrounded by shaped white paper. Installed on the floor to the right of this wall is a geometric shaped paper sculpture atop a triangular wooden plinth. On the wall behind are two horizontally-oriented abstract drawings on large sheets of white paper. Installed on the floor to the right of these drawings are two lower sculptures composed of wood, paper and ceramic.)

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024. (A sculpture mounted on a white wall. The sculpture is composed of an arrangement of oddly shaped ceramic, small shaped paper drawings and wooden dowels that appear to “support” the ceramic shapes at uncanny angles. The overall palette is a mix of pastels and muddier tones of greens, purples and browns. Hung on the wall beneath the sculpture is its “title,” which is a small white ceramic rectangle with a smaller rectangle of navy blue glaze in the upper righthand corner.)

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024.

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024.

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024.

Francesse Dolbrice, installation view, 2024. (A profile view of a wall-mounted abstract sculpture. The sculpture is composed of four shaped paper components with cubic bases that extend out from the wall. They are hung such that they appear to be supporting a wooden frame, which hangs from near-invisible clear cords to hover in front of the paper forms. A piece of shaped paper with an abstract drawing on it is hung just behind the frame; the edges of the paper come up and around the frame.)