Jonathan Lyndon Chase


Jonathan Lyndon Chase is an American visual artist. Chase's paintings and drawings focus primarily on queer black bodies in mundane, everyday spaces. Chase lives and works in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

Early life and education

Chase was born in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1989.
Chase graduated from University of the Arts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 2013 and went on to receive a Master in Fine Arts at the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 2016.

Work

Blending both the interior and the exterior world of queer black males in various emotional states of pain, pleasure, tenderness, and despair, Chase draws and paints scenes that are both poetic and visceral. Chase practice is a process of traditional and digital collage, drawing, photography, poetry, archiving, and research.
Chases's figurative paintings stand stylistically beside peers Louis Fratino, Nicole Eisenman, and Carroll Dunham, and equally reference the erotic woodblock prints of Ukiyo-e. Artist and curator Tiona Nekkia McClodden writes of Chase's paintings, "The figures mirror each other, touch each other …  reach through each other. They are layered, they are tender and have a necessary roughness. Lovemaking, or rather loving oneself is like this. There is the way he allows a reversed negative x-ray transparency to look through certain parts of the body."
Art critic Holland Cotter notes of the exhibition, "Quiet Storm” — which refers to a genre of mellow, primarily African-American pop music — there is nothing the least quiet about Mr. Chase’s exuberant brushwork, or his images of glittered-splashed flesh and gay coupledom." Writer Miss Rosen says of Chase, "Imagine the love child of Missy Elliott and Romare Bearden, raised by Ren & Stimpy, and embracing the intimacies of James Baldwin’s Giovanni’s Room … and you can begin to grasp the intricate complexities and exquisite nuances of African-American artist Jonathan Lyndon Chase."
Chase notes artists Romare Bearden, Alison Saar, Marlon Riggs, Robert Colescott, Alice Neel, and Kerry James Marshall as key inspirations as well as culture and fashion from the1980s and 1990s, Afrofuturism, and science-fiction in relationship to black and queer narratives.

Exhibitions

Solo exhibitions
Selected group exhibitions