Prøve GULL - Gratis

The Anxiety And Ecstasy Of Rashid Johnson

GQ India

|

October - November 2023

Rashid Johnson was a blue-chip artist whose work offered a radically fresh portrayal of Black cultural identity. Then he got sober, found God, and began to transform the art world from the inside.

- Antwaun Sargent

The Anxiety And Ecstasy Of Rashid Johnson

ONE WAY TO measure an artist's success on the island of Manhattan is real estate, and by that metric, among many others, Rashid Johnson has been very successful. On a recent Thursday afternoon, he stood in the sunlit living room of the white 19th-century town house he'd purchased, in 2020, from the late Cars frontman Ric Ocasek and his supermodel wife, Paulina Porizkova, for $9 million. Directly across the street is the home of the artist couple Rachel Feinstein and John Currin; Oleg Cassini, the Russian Italian fashion designer, once lived a few doors down. Johnson's row house was nestled in the middle of "Block Beautiful," the leafy stretch of East 19th Street, in Gramercy Park, where particularly prosperous writers, musicians, painters, designers, and architects have been flocking for over a century, turning it into a kind of de facto artists colony.

Before moving into the 5,800-square-foot house with his wife, the Iranian-born artist Sheree Hovsepian, and their young son, Julius, Johnson oversaw a gut renovation of the residence, in part to make way for his wide-ranging collection of paintings, sculptures, and photographs. On a wall near the kitchen, I recognized the conceptual artist David Hammons's 2012 Untitled (Basketball Drawing), which he made by repeatedly bouncing a basketball coated in charcoal and dirt on a giant sheet of paper. "Of course," Johnson said when I gestured toward it, as if it would be profane for him not to own work by Hammons, perhaps his most immediate creative forebear.

FLERE HISTORIER FRA GQ India

GQ India

GQ India

The Count of Kochi

India's leading performance artist and curator Nikhil Chopra reimagines the upcoming edition of the Kochi-Muziris Biennale as something evolving and responsive—rather than a finished spectacle.

time to read

10 mins

August - September 2025

GQ India

GQ India

Game of Jawns

A DEFINITIVE GUIDE TO THE UNPRECEDENTED UPHEAVAL IN THE FASHION WORLD'S GREAT HOUSES.

time to read

1 min

August - September 2025

GQ India

GQ India

How to Build the Next Great Watch Brand

Sylvain Berneron's debut timepiece made him the most exciting watchmaker in the industry. His second watch is even better.

time to read

2 mins

August - September 2025

GQ India

GQ India

SUPER STRIKER SHREYAS

Shreyas lyer is one of world cricket's biggest stars. Is the national team finally ready to embrace his supreme talents?

time to read

8 mins

August - September 2025

GQ India

GQ India

String Theory

Internet's favourite sitarist Rishab Rikhiram Sharma speaks on learning under the late Pandit Ravi Shankar, making Indian classical music more accessible to modern audiences, and his plans for Sitar for Mental Health.

time to read

7 mins

August - September 2025

GQ India

GQ India

4 Ways to Embrace Maximalism as a Minimalist

Trust us: You've got enough solid V-neck sweaters and straightleg chinos already. Now it's time to stock up on the swerves that swing for the fences.

time to read

1 min

August - September 2025

GQ India

GQ India

VIRGIL ABLOH ARCHIEVE

INSIDE THE TOP SECRET

time to read

3 mins

August - September 2025

GQ India

GQ India

The Sonic Stylist

With a viral mixtape and music video, hip-hop OG Kr$na has finally hit the big time.

time to read

11 mins

August - September 2025

GQ India

GQ India

Opening Doors

MUMBAI’S NIGHTLIFE was surging in the mid-2000s, with over 300 bars and clubs throbbing from the southern tip of Colaba to the louche fringes near the Dahisar plaza.

time to read

4 mins

August - September 2025

GQ India

GQ India

Tracing the Line

From silk atelier to classrooms, Hermès reveals the artistry, precision and play behind its yearlong celebration of craft.

time to read

3 mins

August - September 2025

Translate

Share

-
+

Change font size