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Back to Materials and Objects

David Hammons Untitled (from Fantasy in Flight Series) 1995 Photo © Tate (Oliver Cowling)

David Hammons

9 rooms in Materials and Objects

  • Collage
  • David Hammons
  • Marcel Duchamp
  • Barbara Chase-Riboud and Robert Motherwell
  • Robert Gober
  • Leonor Antunes
  • Meschac Gaba
  • Nalini Malani
  • Salvador Dalí and Robert Zhao Renhui

In this room, discarded materials are transformed into artworks, playing with cultural assumptions of value

Across his six-decade career, David Hammons has consistently challenged the conventions of artmaking. His sculptures, installations, prints and performances use found materials others might consider waste – from cooking fat, to hair swept from barber shop floors. They question notions of fine art and test the limits of museum conservation. Hammons regularly works outside traditional studio and gallery environments, positioning himself as an art world outsider. ‘I like doing stuff better on the street’ he notes, ‘because the art becomes just one of the objects that’s in the path of your everyday existence. It’s what you move through, and it doesn’t have any seniority over anything else.’

Born in 1943, in Springfield, Illinois in the United States, Hammons studied art in Los Angeles before moving to New York in 1974. He is associated with the Black Arts Movement (1965-1970s), a group of writers, musicians and artists who sought to address the needs and aspirations of Black America. The movement was characterised by the creation of new African American led organisations and works of art that reflect Black pride, heritage, and contemporary experience. Hammons’ practice incorporates materials, objects, imagery and language associated with everyday African American life. ‘Whatever you see a lot of’ the artist notes, ‘you can use, you can build something off of.’ The resulting artworks explore his personal experiences while challenging broader cultural stereotypes. Hammons notes: ‘I think I spend eighty-five percent of my time on the streets as opposed to in the studio. So, when I go to the studio I expect to regurgitate these experiences of the street. All the things I see socially – the social conditions of racism – come out like a sweat.’

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Tate Modern
Natalie Bell Building Level 4 West

Getting Here

Ongoing

Free

This display forms part of the D.Daskalopoulos Collection Gift.

The D.Daskalopoulos Collection Gift

David Hammons, Phat Free  1995, 1999

Percussive metallic sounds emanating from a blank screen are later revealed as the result of the artist kicking a bucket along a pavement. Phat Free documents Hammons’ 1995 New York street performance. The footage was later edited for inclusion in the 1997 Whitney Biennial in New York. It is the only video work the artist has ever produced. The title plays on the phrase ‘fat free’, often used to market food and drink products. Hammons’ spelling of ‘phat’, uses an expression popularised by African American culture in the 1980s and ‘90s to describe something as cool or sexy.

Gallery label, August 2024

1/4
artworks in David Hammons

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David Hammons, Untitled  1975

Hammons created this work by covering his naked body in cooking fat and pressing himself against paper or card. He applied powdered pigment to the greasy surface to set the image. Hammons’ Body Prints date back to 1968 and are some of the artist’s earliest works. They reference Yves Klein’s 1960 ‘anthropometry’ paintings. In these performance-happenings, Klein directed the movements of naked women, producing imprints of their painted bodies on paper. The pigment of Blue Angels acknowledges Klein’s characteristic use of the self-registered colour ‘International Klein Blue’. In Hammons’ series, the artist chooses to take on the role of author, subject and printing plate himself.

Gallery label, August 2024

2/4
artworks in David Hammons

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David Hammons, Untitled from Flight Fantasy series  1995

An earlier iteration of this piece was made for A Gathering of the Tribes – a New York salon, gallery and performance space based in the East Village tenement home belonging to Hammons’ friend, the poet Steve Cannon (1935–2019). In the late 1990s and early 2000s the success of the East Village arts scene led to rising property prices and the gentrification of the neighbourhood. In 2014, Cannon was forced to leave his building. As a result, the wall on which the original artwork was created became subject to a planning dispute, prompting a debate about cultural heritage, value and what constitutes an artwork.

Gallery label, August 2024

3/4
artworks in David Hammons

More on this artwork

David Hammons, Blue Angels (Penises)  c.1970

Hammons created this work by covering his naked body in cooking fat and pressing himself against paper or card. He applied powdered pigment to the greasy surface to set the image. Hammons’ Body Prints date back to 1968 and are some of the artist’s earliest works. They reference Yves Klein’s 1960 ‘anthropometry’ paintings. In these performance-happenings, Klein directed the movements of naked women, producing imprints of their painted bodies on paper. The pigment of Blue Angels acknowledges Klein’s characteristic use of the self-registered colour ‘International Klein Blue’. In Hammons’ series, the artist chooses to take on the role of author, subject and printing plate himself.

Gallery label, August 2024

4/4
artworks in David Hammons

More on this artwork

Art in this room

T12578: Phat Free
David Hammons Phat Free 1995, 1999
T16129: Untitled
David Hammons Untitled 1975
T16105: Untitled from Flight Fantasy series
David Hammons Untitled from Flight Fantasy series 1995
T16048: Blue Angels (Penises)
David Hammons Blue Angels (Penises) c.1970
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