Theaster Gates (born 1973, Chicago, Illinois, U.S.) American community activist and artist whose work—which included multimedia projects, installations, and performance art—questioned issues of racial and economic inequality.
Gates grew up in a working-class family on Chicago’s West Side. After earning (1996) a B.S. degree in urban planning at Iowa State University, he studied (1998) African religions at the University of Cape Town and then took up (1999) a residency with ceramics masters in Tokoname, Japan. In 2005 he returned to Iowa State to complete a multidisciplinary master’s degree in urban planning, ceramics, and religious studies. Gates’s media included ceramics, ready-mades, salvage, and the organization of multimedia, multiparticipant projects with activist themes. In his ongoing Dorchester Projects (begun in 2006)—which involved the purchase of blighted properties and the renovation and repurposing of them into cultural-enrichment centres (that housed such collections as glass slides, books on art and architecture, vinyl LPs, and archived collections of Ebony and Jet magazines) in the Greater Grand Crossing neighbourhood, on Chicago’s South Side—Gates erased the boundary between life and art.
His first solo art exhibition, Plate Convergence (2007), held at Chicago’s Hyde Park Art Center, showcased a fictional mixed-race ceramist played by an actor. Gates’s installation-performance Temple Exercises (2009) at Chicago’s Museum of Contemporary Art led to an invitation to exhibit at the 2010 Whitney Biennial in New York City, where he presented shoeshine stands and displayed fire hoses as well as staging performances by his singing group, the Black Monks of Mississippi. Gates drew international acclaim in 2012 at Documenta 13 in Kassel, Germany, for 12 Ballads for Huguenot House, an installation crafted of salvage materials retrieved from one of his Grand Crossing properties and a local derelict building. In 2014 he began work on an art installation that would serve as a gateway for the Chicago Transit Authority’s refurbishment of the 95th Street Red Line rapid-transit station. His two works of public art (located at the north and south ends of the station) would incorporate some symbolic items—fire hoses, for example—that harkened back to the American civil rights movement.
In 2006 Gates became an arts programmer at the University of Chicago, where in 2011 he was appointed director of Arts + Public Life, an incubator that linked the university and its South Side community in creative endeavours. He was also the founder (2010) of the nonprofit Rebuild Foundation, which took arts programs to public schools.