Showing posts with label tires. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tires. Show all posts

Thursday, July 31, 2025

Tire art at the National Gallery of Art

Chakaia Booker (b. 1953), It's So Hard to Be Green, 2000, rubber tires and wood, at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, April 2, 2025/By Patricia Leslie
Chakaia Booker at the opening of her Treading New Ground at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, April 2, 2025/By Patricia Leslie



Ask anyone in the art world about the sculptor who fashions art from old tires and they'll say her name immediately: Chakaia Booker (b. 1953) who is also a fantastic recycler!

In the Tower of the East Building at the National Gallery of Art, three of her creations are on view in an exhibition named appropriately enough,"Treading New Ground."  It's a "must-see," a wonder and a definite draw for environmentalists.
Detail of Acid Rain, 2001, by Chakaia Booker (b. 1953), rubber tires and wood, loaned by the National Museum of Women in the Arts, at Treading New Ground at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, April 2, 2025.  You can almost smell these /By Patricia Leslie
Detail of Acid Rain, 2001, by Chakaia Booker (b. 1953), rubber tires and wood, loaned by the National Museum of Women in the Arts, at Treading New Ground at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, April 2, 2025. This reminds me of handcuffs and the materials ICE uses on immigrants/By Patricia Leslie

Exhibitions made of recycled materials are always an inspiration to me, marveling at the many ways creators can fashion art from most any old thing, producing results for others to see and admire and set us thinking about ways we can do the same to reuse materials and help "save the Earth" and combat climate change at the same time.

Rather than winding up in landfills, tires which Chakaia repurposes have extended lifelines, like manufacturers who use them in "rain gardens, roadways, construction materials, and cement manufacturing" to name a few ways the National Gallery cites. 

If you are so inclined, many other uses can be found on the internet for remaking tires, like tire swings, rubber mulch for landscaping, mats, and playground surfaces. (Check here for more. Hmmm, all those Weather-Tech ads you see?  You think its products come from recycled tires? Weather-Tech should consider a commission for Ms. Booker who could become its brand artist.) 

At the opening of her Treading New Ground at the National Gallery of Art in Washington, April 2, 2025, Chakaia Booker's attire included her colorful headdress/By Patricia Leslie
Chakaia Booker's materials for her art works include pieces of old tires from trucks and cars which visitors to the exhibition are invited to touch. The label says 
"we may find beauty and inspiration in an ordinary tire" but I am still looking. At 
Treading New Ground, 
National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C. April 2, 2025/By Patricia Leslie


Walking through the streets of New York in the 1980s, Chakaia noticed abandoned and discarded tires and the spaces they occupied. She considered all the different ways they could be used, and voila!  An art medium was born! 

Her website says she also creates works from stainless steel  for interior and exterior public spaces.  She exhibits all over the world, including the 2000 Whitney Biennial and her works are found in about 50+ museums in the U.S. In 2005 she received a Guggenheim Fellowship.

Did you know that when tires hit the roadways, pollution in the form of tiny particulates containing neurotoxic and carcinogenic compounds that directly endanger the health of both humans and water wildlife are released in the air? So says the National Gallery of Art.

Rather than space ships, EVs, and Republicans, maybe Mr. Musk can wrap his head around making an alternative for our vehicles. Who's working on this?

"My intention is to translate materials into imagery that will stimulate people to consider themselves as a part of their environment, as one piece of a larger whole." Chakaia Booker

Kanitra Fletcher, associate curator of African American and Afro-Diasporic art, curated the exhibition with Claudia Watts, research assistant, both of the National Gallery of Art which organized the show.  Thank you very much, ladies!


What: Chakaia Booker: Treading New Ground

When: Through August 2, 2026, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. seven days a week. Closed on Christmas and New Year's days.

Where: The Tower at the East Building, National Gallery of Art, between 3rd and 4th on Pennsylvania Avenue, Washington

How much: Admission is always free at the National Gallery of Art.

Metro stations for the National Gallery of Art:
Smithsonian, Federal Triangle, Navy Memorial-Archives, or L'Enfant Plaza

For more information: (202) 737-4215

Accessibility information
: (202) 842-6905


patricialesli@gmail.com