self-published


Ser Serpas: Potentials

December 2021




Across Ser Serpas’s navy sweatshirt read one of the most exhausted endorsements of Americana to-date: ‘I <3 NY.’ Serpas had appeared moments ago at a photographer’s birthday located in Manhattan’s Lower East Side. It was almost midnight. We hugged on the couch. As we disentangled our many limbs from an extended embrace, I noticed an outline of Lady Liberty inside her sweatshirt’s swollen ‘<3’. I teased, “To be lost to the fabric of New York.” She returned my grin with a half-smile and replied, “Sooner or later everyone ends up a little lost on this island.”


With both hands now free, Serpas rolled up her sleeves and searched for a cigarette. Her truism was emblematic evidence, I thought, that any pedestrian could end up alone on Manhattan Island feeling lost to the world. Even Lady Liberty, herself a rather luminous pedestrian, has more or less been forgotten on tiny Ellis Island. Meanwhile, traces of the statue’s miserable predicament continue to circulate in the form of discount store souvenirs or graphics designer sweatshirts. Serpas laughed when I suggested this to her. “Correction,” she said, “Sooner or later everyone ends up a little lost on this island, visibly wearing their heart on their sleeve,” pointing to the fabled light bearer on her garment. With a flick of her wrist, she ignited a fluorescent lighter and then set fire to the remaining cigarette from her pack. “That’s just American apparel.”


Ser Serpas -- artist, poet, model, community organizer, collaborator, curator, and, for the time being, expat -- is not our Lady Liberty incarnate. She is inclined to drift. Sometimes the artist finds potential in physical objects. These objects are typically trash she encounters on the street or discarded debris she collects from friends and neighbors. After she sorts through her debris, she sticks, stacks, tucks, ties, weaves, balances, and bonds the discarded objects together for gallery or museum exhibition. pay to cum (what i thought), 2017, shown at Queer Thoughts in New York, was made in a state of rapid repair. cum included worn leather, decayed berries, and weathered textiles woven through a plaster headboard and installed sideways onto a gallery wall. The artwork, with its inscrutable mess of veins, muscles, skins, and boudoir contraband, resembled a fin de siècle awning broadcasting a libertine’s wildest dreams.




At other times, potential finds the artist. While studying Visual Arts at Columbia University in 2017, the artist’s professors and classmates had recommendations pertaining to her senior thesis. They suggested she include biographical narrative to contextualize her work. This was disheartening. During her time at Columbia, representational painting and personal essays had, with much exhaustion, consumed her peers. These styles of self-expression suffered from a lack of profundity and an excess of imitation. Ultimately, her professors and classmates urged her to cave in to trends. The artist responded in written form.


“I was sure they wanted me to make blank work, or rather to just identify my work as blank work which they sometimes think is equally as good, and I was not having any of that. Enough blank artists were doing blank work.”


Serpas was uninterested in trends and rejected conforming to blank work.




Two years later, the artist’s defiance materialized into an exhibition. Titled “what we need is another body,” held at Truth and Consequences in Geneva, Serpas assembled nine sculptures of discarded objects, including the stub of an artificial, eggshell-colored Christmas tree, tree of life, 2017, and a cinched taupe belt bedazzled with red plastic ties, twine, and a sleeping mask, migration, 2017. Each sculpture stood underneath a plastic shopping bag, suggestive of dollar store pedestals. The space was illuminated by spotlights and was intentionally left dark from flattened FedEx boxes that covered the gallery’s windows. Sprawled across the interior cardboard-premises and walls were nine handwritten poems. Through the dim light, I could barely make out the words, “TREE OF LIFE.” Did her poems index her sculptures, or, perhaps, was it the sculptures that indexed the poems? It’s hard to say as it was hard to see. Here was proof that our desire to see one another clearly, even ourselves, is often just out of reach, unstable, and, at its lousiest, unbearable.







The artist and poet, however, strays from naming her practice as one that obfuscates. Her exhibitions are full of discarded objects as artworks, or what she calls “potentials.” The “potentials” resist prescriptive taxonomy cast upon them by way of a viewer’s lazy projections. One might ask any of the following upon seeing her artworks: is it assemblage? Is it a scatter piece? Is it institutional critique? It is unknowable. “The negation is all the more stunning in its nihilism,” writes artist Hannah Black in the introduction to Serpas’s book of poetry, Carman, 2018, “because it is ambivalent and hungry.” The artwork’s refusal to be defined as refuse by the viewer is both “its nihilism” and its “potential” asserting itself in real time. Thus, the artist’s “potentials” come alive by its right to refusal. The artworks take on a pseudo-subjectivity and begin to have a little life of their very own.



For through the loop and the belt, 2019, two dusty closets were stacked atop one another while contents like automobile parts, stones, pipes, and shattered glass spool out onto dirt-trodden ground. Serpas goes so far to wink at the “potential” narrative of negation in through the loop and the belt as this “potential” bears the explicit mark of the unliving. The artwork calls to mind two or three giants wrapped in starch whites with outstretched arms mourning two mounds of muddy earth presumed to be freshly buried bodies. Yet, a divine providence relieved the artist’s afflicted grievers. While the artwork happens to mimic the scene of death itself, its title suggests the opposite. through the loop and the belt advertises a secured state of repetition, a motion that both loops and fastens, a cycle of life and death. Put simply, rebirth. Does through the loop and the belt’s nod to rebirth mark a return to an origin? Or, is it a return of something repressed? Does it even matter? At the close of an exhibition, the artist’s “potentials” are deaccessioned and returned to the neighborhood in which they were previously taken. Back to Paradise they go.







Growing up in Boyle Heights, Los Angeles, Serpas shared a bedroom with her mother until she graduated from high school. The artist recalls hoarding a small pile of trash-as-treasure under her bed to abide by her mother’s insistence for order in their bedroom. Her mother worked in the property division of the Los Angeles Police Department and was tasked with cataloging debris from various crimes. The confiscated items were taken in by the state and, eventually, filed as evidence before a court of law. The artist took notes from her mother’s profession and learned early on that anything human owned is bound for another life given the right (or wrong) set of circumstances. Like atrophies for participation, 2021, displayed at Galerie Balice Hertling in Paris. The wooden roller coaster-like work comprises two vertical wood pallets leaning against one another at a 45-degree angle with two slotted wood panels hanging down from the crest of the artwork to form a lattice. A four-legged chair parked atop the diagonal pallet faces the floor. Given these circumstances, the artwork functions as a ride-for-one hurtling its lonely participant straight towards another life in hell.




Recently, the artist has adopted a post-Modernist practice: painting photographs. The paintings, made in sets of 18 and rendered on plywood, reproduce footage of Serpas in pre- and post-coital montages. Each painting depicts a cropped, close-up Serpas-like double that poses and flexes for a hungry, blurry-eyed voyeur. The paintings are worked over in a creamy, low-resolution palette. Sometimes, the artist’s double encounters a companion. In one painting (all Untitled), a hand attached to a stubby arm pulls down burgundy underwear revealing rosy shadows, and, in another painting, a fist punches knuckles-first into doughy bed sheets as a lover grips at their wrist.











The carnal scenes are a rather obvious nod to early 2000s celebrity sex tapes that cropped up on the internet during Serpas’s adolescence. The “leaked” sex tapes of Paris Hilton or Kim Kardashian captured restless ingenues in heat, much like Serpas’s paintings, and forever immortalized these ingenues as self-canonized deities of online romance. Unlike all that online smut, Serpas tells me her paintings “have few identifying markers on the body.” No tattooed twinks, rugged daddies, or blonde bombshells to view here. The artist’s thick application of pigment onto plywood melts away hard lines and flattens her busy figures. By painting towards abstraction, as opposed to representation, she cultivates an atmosphere of anonymity. Here, Serpas provides proof again, through the vehicle of abstraction, that desire is often illegible.


Approximately two months later was the night we met up in New York. We shared her last remaining cigarette. When the smoke ran out, she dropped the nub and stomped out its embers. She looked around and divulged, “My sights are on Paris next.” I wonder what trash she’ll find there.