About The Work
Reggie Burrows Hodges has created, Playing Dub Records at Fima Post, a limited edition of 36 signed and numbered prints to benefit Lincoln Center's cultural programming.
Hodges delves into storytelling and visual metaphor through his paintings, which grapple with themes of identity, community, truth, and memory. Starting from a black ground, he develops the scene around his figures with painterly, foggy brushwork, examining how perception is altered when the descriptive focus is placed not on human agents but on their surroundings. His art subtly references his past, drawing from his experiences growing up in Compton as well as his years as an athlete, touring musician, and recording studio owner.
This image pays homage to Hodges’s twenty-year tenure as a vocalist and bassist with a reggae dub band. In a 2020 interview, Hodges drew a direct link between his paintings and the sensation of sound, comparing his negotiation of “how to capture space within the picture plane . . . to how space feels within dub music . . . dub being this form of basically distilling down a larger composition to create this over-enhancement of space.”
Courtesy of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
About Reggie Burrows Hodges
24.75 x 20.00 in
62.9 x 50.8 cm
This work is signed and numbered by the artist.
About The Work
Reggie Burrows Hodges has created, Playing Dub Records at Fima Post, a limited edition of 36 signed and numbered prints to benefit Lincoln Center's cultural programming.
Hodges delves into storytelling and visual metaphor through his paintings, which grapple with themes of identity, community, truth, and memory. Starting from a black ground, he develops the scene around his figures with painterly, foggy brushwork, examining how perception is altered when the descriptive focus is placed not on human agents but on their surroundings. His art subtly references his past, drawing from his experiences growing up in Compton as well as his years as an athlete, touring musician, and recording studio owner.
This image pays homage to Hodges’s twenty-year tenure as a vocalist and bassist with a reggae dub band. In a 2020 interview, Hodges drew a direct link between his paintings and the sensation of sound, comparing his negotiation of “how to capture space within the picture plane . . . to how space feels within dub music . . . dub being this form of basically distilling down a larger composition to create this over-enhancement of space.”
Courtesy of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
About Reggie Burrows Hodges
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