Bibliography and Exhibitions
MONOGRAPHS AND SOLO EXHIBITIONS:
Austin (TX). Arthouse at the Jones Center.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: Cult of Color: Call to Color.
2008.
Solo exhibition.
Bologna (Italy). Galleria Marabini.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: Reveal.
January 24-April 12, 2008.
Solo exhibition.
Cleveland (OH). Cleveland Museum of Art.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: Moments in Mound History.
December 12, 2003-April 4, 2004.
Solo exhibition.
Dallas (TX). Dunn and Brown Contemporary.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: It Came from Studio Floor.
November 22-December 17, 2002.
Solo exhibition.
Dallas (TX). Dunn and Brown Contemporary.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: St. Sesom and the Cult of Color.
September 2-October 22, 2005.
44 pp. exhib. cat., color illus.
Dallas (TX). Dunn and Brown Contemporary.
Wow That's Me TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK.
2000.
Solo exhibition.
Dallas (TX). Gerald Peters Gallery.
Off Colored: TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK.
1998.
Solo exhibition.
Edinburgh (Scotland). Fruitmarket Gallery.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: The Wayward Thinker.
February 10-April 8, 2007.
94 pp., color, illus. Texts by Thelma Golden and Eleanor Heartney. Solo exhibition. [Traveled to Museum Boymans-van Beuningen, Rotterdam, May 26-August 12, 2007.] 4to (28 x 22 cm.), papered boards. First ed.
Fort Worth (TX). Modern Art Museum.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: The Life and Death of #1 and WHO.
2001.
Solo exhibition.
Hancock, Trenton Doyle.
TRENTON DOYLE HANDCOCK: Me A Mound.
New York: Kaput Press/PictureBox, Inc., 2006.
168 pp., 250 color illus. storybook describing an ancient conflict between the peaceful, organic Mounds who may have been created by the same father, Homerbuctas, who made their violent, nightmarish enemies the Vegans, but the two clans have been caught up in a tragi-comic struggle through nearly a decade's installations, paintings, drawings and etchings. Me a Mound combines biblical allusions, gags, food, and sex as it describes their saga in Hancock's laconic Texan prose and lays it out in his explosively colorful paintings. It's filled with new work created just for the book and a comprehensive overview of Hancock's oeuvre, on top of the entire Mounds versus Vegans saga to date, plus trading cards and inserts. 4to (31 x 23 cm.), die-cut cover.
Houston (TX). Contemporary Arts Museum.
Perspectives 129: TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: The Life and Death of #1.
August 31-October 14, 2001.
24 pp. exhib. cat., 24 b&w illus. plus drawings, checklist, biog., bibliog. Text by Lynn M. Herbert. [Traveled to: Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth and Texas Fine Arts Association at The Jones Center for Contemporary Art, Austin, TX.] 4to, wraps. First ed.
New York (NY). James Cohan Gallery.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: Fear.
November 20, 2008-January 20, 2009.
Solo exhibition. 8 new paintings arranged against walls of painted teardrop forms, and Fix, a portfolio of 20 mixed media prints completed at the Brodsky Center for Innovative Printmaking, Rutgers University. [See installation view of paintings: http://www.jamescohan.com/exhibitions/2008-11-20_trenton-doyle-hancock/]
New York (NY). James Cohan Gallery.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: For a Floor of Flora: a story about an average prehistoric ape family.
January 21-March 13, 2003.
Solo exhibition.
New York (NY). James Cohan Gallery.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: In the Blestian Room.
March 4-April 16, 2006.
Solo exhibition. Exhibition of paintings made of collage, paint, and accumulations of detritus displayed in an installation with artist's text graffiti in black covering the gallery walls. The works extend the artist's ongoing absurdist parable of good and evil. The battle between the Vegans and the meat-eating Mounds takes a new turn, as Sesom, one of the Vegans, has a dream in which he discovers the liberating power of color. In The Ossified Theosophied, a transformed Sesom begins to make his miracle-machines, creating the life-affirming color blasts.
New York (NY). James Cohan Gallery.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: The Legend is in Trouble.
June 21-July 28, 2001.
Solo exhibition.
North Miami (FL). Museum of Contemporary Art (MOCA).
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: It Came from Studio Floor.
2003.
Solo exhibition. [Presumably the same work as in the exhibition of same title at Dunn and Brown Contemporary, Dallas, TX, November 22-December 17, 2002.]
Paris (TX). Paris Junior College.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK.
2004.
Solo exhibition.
Philadelphia (PA). Institute of Contemporary Art, University of Pennsylvania.
TRENTON DOYLE HANCOCK: Wow That's Mean and Other Vegan Cuisine.
April 25-August 3, 2008.
Installation.
GENERAL BOOKS AND GROUP EXHIBITIONS:
ASPEN (CO). Aspen Art Museum.
Like Color in Pictures.
February 16-April 15, 2007.
Group exhibition of twenty artists. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock and Byron Kim.
AUSTIN (TX). Arthouse at the Jones Center, University of Texas.
The Sirens' Song.
January 20-March 4, 2007.
Group exhibition. Included: Xiomara De Oliver, Trenton Doyle Hancock, David McGee, William Villalongo. [Traveled to: Galveston Art Center, Galveston, TX.]
AUSTIN (TX). Austin Museum of Art.
Color/Pattern/Grid: Selections from the Austin Museum of Art & Austin Collections.
March 5-May 15, 2005.
Group exhibition. Co-curated by Dana Friis-Hansen and James Housefield. Included: Michael Ray Charles, Trenton Doyle Hancock.
AUSTIN (TX). Jack S. Blanton Museum of Art, University of Texas.
New Now Next.
April 29-August 13, 2006.
Group exhibition of seven artists. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock, Byron Kim, Annette Lawrence.
AUSTIN (TX). Jack S. Blanton Museum of Art, University of Texas at Austin.
Cartoon Noir: Four Contemporary Investigations.
September 13-December 29, 2002.
Group exhibition. Mixed media works by Trenton Doyle Hancock and Ellen Gallagher (along with Arturo Herrera, Jeremy Blake), each of whom obliquely cites the darker side of cartooning and animation traditions through imagery or story line. An exhibition of the museum's recent acquisitions of contemporary art.
BATON ROUGE (LA). Louisiana State University.
Works on Paper.
1996.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock.
BENNEVENTO (Italy). ARCOS: Museo di Arte Contemporanea del Sannio.
C'era una volta un re.
2006.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock.
BRONX (NY). Longwood Art Gallery.
Ziggy and the Black Dinosaurs and Other Folktales.
February 26-May 6, 2000.
Group exhibition curated by Nadine Robinson. Included: Nicole Awai, Ramdasha Bikceem, Tony Gray, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Terrance Walker. An exhibition about reclaiming black cultural history through folktales.
COLUMBUS (OH). Columbus Museum of Art.
Reordering Reality: Collecting Contemporary Art.
2004.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock.
DALLAS (TX). Dallas Center for Contemporary Art.
Drawing Under the Influence: Lee Baxter Davis & His Proteges.
2004.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock.
DALLAS (TX). Dallas Museum of Art.
Fast Forward: Contemporary Collections for the Dallas Museum of Art.
February 11-May 20, 2007.
328 pp. exhib. cat., 343 color illus. Edited by Maria de Corral and John R. Lane; With contributions by Frances Colpitt, María de Corral, John R. Lane, Mark Rosenthal, Allan Schwartzman, and Charles Wylie. A two-part exhibition of 200 works from the modern and contemporary holdings of the Hoffman, Rachofsky and Rose families, who together gifted their private collections and future acquisitions to the Museum in 2005. Curated by Maria de Corral. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock. 4to, cloth, d.j.
DALLAS (TX). Dunn and Brown Contemporary.
Everything.
July 14-August 25, 2007.
Group exhibition. Included: Deborah Grant, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Annette Lawrence, Karyn Olivier,
DALLAS (TX). Dunn and Brown Contemporary.
Flip.
September 5-October 4, 2003.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock, Annette Lawrence.
DALLAS (TX). Dunn and Brown Contemporary.
Next.
June 14-July 13, 2002.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock, Annette Lawrence, David McGee.
DALLAS (TX). Gerald Peters Gallery.
Link.
July 17-August 29, 1998.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock, Annette Lawrence.
DALLAS (TX). Gerald Peters Gallery.
New Views: Eight Emerging Texas Artists.
1997.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock, Annette Lawrence.
GREENSBORO (NC). Weatherspoon Art Museum, University of North Carolina.
Art on Paper 2002: The 38th Art on Paper Exhibition.
2002.
24 pp. exhib. cat., 19 illus. Text by Ron Platt. Includes Trenton Doyle Hancock, Senam Okudzeto, et al.
HONOLULU (HI). Contemporary Art Museum Honolulu.
Personal Mythologies: Earlier, Recent and Future Acquisitions.
2005.
Group exhibition of contemporary art. Includes Trenton Doyle Hancock and Gary Simmons.
HOUSTON (TX). Contemporary Arts Museum.
Out of the Ordinary: New Art from Texas.
August 12-October 8, 2000.
112 pp. exhib. cat. Curators: Lynn M. Herbert and Paola Mosiani. Group exhibition of eleven artists. Includes: Zoe Charlton and Trenton Doyle Hancock. 4to, wraps. First ed.
HOUSTON (TX). Contemporary Arts Museum.
Perspectives @ 25: A Quarter Century of New Art in Houston.
October 16, 2004-January 9, 2005.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock.
HOUSTON (TX). Contemporary Arts Museum.
Splat Boom Pow! The Influence of Cartoons in Contemporary Art.
April 12-June 29, 2003.
128 pp., 46 color and 8 b&w illus, checklist, biogs., bibliog. Texts by Valerie Cassel, Roger Sabin, and Bernard Welt; cartoon timeline by Jamie Coville. Numerous African American artists included: Laylah Ali, Candida Alvarez, John Bankston, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Michael Ray Charles, Renée Cox, Kojo Griffin, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Kerry James Marshall, Julie Mehretu, Robert A. Pruitt. [Traveled to Institute of Contemporary Art, Boston, MA; Wexner Center for the Arts, Columbus, OH.] 4to (11.5 x 9.5 in.), wraps.
HOUSTON (TX). Deborah Colton Gallery.
The Talented 10 - Part I: Houston Artists to Inspire One's Soul.
November 21-December 12, 2009.
Group exhibition. Curated by Lester Marks. Included: Mequitta Ahuja, Nathaniel Donnett (reprise of recent installation at Project Row Houses), Trenton Doyle Hancock, Julie Mehretu, and Angelbert Metoyer.
HOUSTON (TX). Hooks-Epstein Galleries.
Miniatures: Invitational Exhibition.
October 25-November 29, 2003.
Group exhibition. Included: Leamon Green, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Kermit Oliver, Robert Pruitt.
HOUSTON (TX). Museum of Fine Arts.
African-American Art from the MFAH Collection.
February 22-May 9, 2004.
Group exhibition curated by Alvia Wardlaw. A selection from the more than 400 works by African American artists in the museum's collection. Included: Henry Ossawa Tanner (Flight Into Egypt), Richmond Barthé, John Biggers, Roy DeCarava, Thornton Dial, Sr., Trenton Doyle Hancock, Earlie Hudnall, Lois Mailou Jones, Bert Long, Jesse Lott, Louise Ozell Martin, David McGee, Tierney Malone, Karyn Olivier, Bert Samples, Carroll Harris Simms, Charles White, and Vicki Meek (The Crying Room: A Memorial to the Ancestors (1992), a room-size installation that presents slave-trade records along with ideographic symbols of the ancestral realm from Nigeria's Yoruba people.)
HOUSTON (TX). Museum of Fine Arts.
Learning by Doing: 25 Years of the Core Program.
2008.
A two-part group exhibition curated by Alison de Lima Greene. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock, Demetrius Oliver, Karyn Olivier.
HOUSTON (TX). Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.
Houston Collects: African American Art.
August 3-October 26, 2008.
Group exhibition. Included: Mequitta Ahuja, Johnny Banks, Jean-Michel Basquiat, John Biggers, Hawkins Bolden, Elizabeth Catlett, Michael Ray Charles, Henry Ray Clark, Charles Criner, Aaron Douglas, David Driskell, Robert Duncanson, William Edmondson, Kojo Griffin, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Earl J. Hooks, Lois Mailou Jones, Annette Lawrence, Jacob Lawrence, Bert Long, Jr., David McGee, Angelbert Metoyer, Floyd Newsum, Lettie North, Kemit Oliver, Demetrius Oliver, Horace Pippin, Stephanie Pogue, Herbert Singleton, Michael Kahlil Taylor, Henry Ossawa Tanner, Hank Willis Thomas, Bill Traylor, et al. [For associated publlication, see: John Hope Franklin and Alvia Wardlaw, Collecting African American Art. Yale Univ. Press, 2009.)
ISTANBUL (Turkey). Istanbul Biennial.
8th International Istanbul Biennial: Poetic Justice.
September 20-November 16, 2003.
Group exhibition. Included: Zarina Bhimji, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Julie Mehretu, Zwelethu Mthethwa, Pascale Marthine Tayou.
KNOXVILLE (TN). Knoxville Museum of Art.
Size Matters: XS: Recent Small-Scale Painting.
2008.
Group exhibition of 42 works by 24 artists. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock.
London (UK). Alexandre Pollazzon Ltd.
Welcome to My World.
July 13-September 1, 2007.
Group exhibition consisting of sculptures, drawings, mixed media paintings, an audio piece, video pieces, etchings and a comic supplement by a selection of international contemporary artists. Curated by two New York curators Amy Davila and Matthew Day Jackson. Included: Deborah Grant, Trenton Doyle Hancock, William Villalongo.
LYON (France). Lyon Biennial.
It Happened Tomorrow.
2003.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock.
NEW ORLEANS (LA). Contemporary Arts Center, and other locations.
Prospect.1 New Orleans.
November 1, 2008-January 18, 2009.
408 pp. exhib. cat., illus. Texts by Barbara Bloemink, Lolis Elie, Claire Tancons, Dan Cameron. Blockbuster exhibition (the first New Orleans Biennial) exhibiting work of 82 local, national and international artists, the largest biennial of international contemporary art ever organized in the United States and without question the first such high-profile show to include almost 25% African and African American artists. Brilliantly envisioned and curated by Dan Cameron. Hosted by all of the city's major institutions and at two dozen other sites throughout New Orleans. Artists included: El Anatsui, John Barnes, Jr., Sanford Biggers, Willie Birch, Mark Bradford, Roy Ferdinand, Rico Gatson, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Isaac Julien, Kalup Linzy, Dave McKenzie, Julie Mehretu, Zwelethu Mthethwa, Wangechi Mutu, Robin Rhode, Nadine Robinson, Malick Sidibé, Jacqueline Tarry, Pascale Marthine Tayou, and Nari Ward. [Reviews: Glenn Ligon, "Civic Engagement: To Miss New Orleans," Artforum, January 1, 2009 (see separate description of this review under Ligon]; Steven Stern, Frieze 120, January-February 2009; long descriptive review; Natalie Sciortino-Rinehart, ArtPulse Magazine (http://artpulsemagazine.com/prospect1-in-new-orleans/]; and dozens more.] 4to, boards.
NEW YORK (NY). Andrea Rosen Gallery.
Looking at Words: The Formal Presence of Text in Modern and Contemporary Works on Paper.
November 2, 2005-January 1, 2006.
Blockbuster group exhibition. Included: Jean Michel Basquiat, Frédéric Bruly Boubré, DAZE, Sandra Fabara (Lady Pink), Ellen Gallagher, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Glenn Ligon, Kerry James Marshall, William Pope.L, Adrian Piper, Gary Simmons, Kara Walker.
NEW YORK (NY). Esso Gallery.
ARTE POVERA NOW AND THEN (Perspectives for a new guerrilla art).
April 14-May 19, 2007.
Group exhibition of 28 contemporary artists. Curated by Francine Benjo and Potassio Pliffi. Included: Deborah Grant and Trenton Doyle Hancock.
NEW YORK (NY). James Cohan Gallery.
A Brighter Day.
June 9-July 14, 2006.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock.
NEW YORK (NY). James Cohan Gallery.
Balls.
July 11-August 18, 2000.
Group exhibition of 14 artists, including David Hammons, Trenton Doyle Hancock.
NEW YORK (NY). James Cohan Gallery.
Between the Lines.
May 7-June 12, 2004.
Group exhibition of gallery artists including: Trenton Doyle Hancock, Yinka Shonibare.
NEW YORK (NY). James Cohan Gallery.
Mask.
December 13, 2007-January 26, 2008.
Group exhibition. Included: Nick Cave, Phyllis Galembo, Trenton Doyle Hancock, M'Dilo Mutima, Ingrid Mwangi, Yinka Shonibare, Jeff Sonhouse, William Villalongo.
NEW YORK (NY). James Cohan Gallery.
The Bid Id.
February 21-March 24, 2001.
Exhibition of 7 artists who use personal iconography to explore the unconscious. Included Trenton Doyle Hancock.
NEW YORK (NY). Museum of American Folk Art.
Dargerism: Contemporary Artists and Henry Darger.
April 15-September 21, 2008.
Group exhibition examining Darger's influence on 11 artists. Curated by Brooke Davis Anderson. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock.
NEW YORK (NY). Museum of Modern Art.
The Compulsive Line: Etching 1900 to Now!.
January 25-April 17, 2006.
Group exhibition. Curated by Starr Figura. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock, Julie Mehretu. [Traveling exhib.]
NEW YORK (NY). National Academy of Design.
181st Annual: An Invitational Exhibition of Contemporary American Art.
May 11-June 18, 2006.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock (S.J. Wallace Truman Fund Prize), Maren Hassinger, James Little, and Alison Saar. 12mo, wraps.
NEW YORK (NY). Sara Meltzer Gallery.
Rendered: Works on Paper.
June 17-August 1, 2003.
Group exhibition of work by 46 artists. Included: John Bankston, Kojo Griffin, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Arnold J. Kemp.
NEW YORK (NY). Studio Museum in Harlem.
Freestyle.
April 28-June 24, 2001.
88 (2). approx. 60 color plates, and a few b&w illus., biogs. and bibliogs. of individual artists, notes on contributors, exhib. checklist. 28 contemporary artists with an essay on each (by 28 different contributors). Foreword by Lowery Stokes Sims, intro. Thelma Golden, text by Thelma Walker. Ed. Christine Y. Kim and Franklin Surmans. Artists included: Laylah Ali, John Bankston, Sanford Biggers, Mark S. Bradford, Louis Cameron, Rico Gatson, Deborah Grant, Kojo Griffin, Adler Guerrier, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Tana Hargest, Kira Lynn Harris, David Huffman, Jerald Ieans, Rashid Johnson, Vincent Johnson, Jennie C. Jones, Arnold J. Kemp, David McKenzie, Julie Mehretu, Adia Millett, Kori Newkirk, Camille Norment, Senam Okudzeto, Clifford Owens, William Pope.L, Nadine Robinson, Susan Smith-Pinelo, Eric Wesley. [Traveled to Santa Monica Museum of Art, Santa Monica, CA, November-December, 2001.] [Selected reviews: Holland Cotter, "A Full Studio Museum Show." NYT, Friday, May 11:B34; Peter Plagens, "Harlem Goes Freestyle," Newsweek, May 14, 2001:60; Horace Brockington, "Freestyle," NY Arts Magazine, May 31, 2001; Michelle Jacques, "Freestyle," Fuse Magazine, Vol 24, No. 2 (2001):37; Jerry Saltz Jerry, "Post Black," The Village Voice, May 22, 2001; Peter Schjeldahl, "Breaking Away: A flowering of young African-American artists," The New Yorker. June 11, 2001; Nancy Princenthal, "Freestyle," Artext, August-October, 2001; Christopher Knight, "Cultural Evolution in Freestyle," Los Angeles Times, October 2, 2001; Sarah Valdez, "Freestyling," Art in America, September 2001.] 4to, wraps. First ed.
NEW YORK (NY). Triple Candie.
Sugar and Cream: Large Unstretched Wall-Hangings by Contemporary Artists.
2002.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock.
NEW YORK (NY). Whitney Museum of American Art.
2000 Biennial.
March 23-June 4, 2000.
272 pp., 250 illus., 141 in color, biog., bibliog., and exhibs. for each artist. Texts by William L. Anderson, Michael G. Auping, Valerie Cassel, Hugh M. Davies, Jane Farver, Andrea Miller-Keller, Lawrence R. Rinder. Includes: Dawoud Bey, Chakaia Booker, Thornton Dial, Kojo Griffin, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Arthur Jafa, Paul Pfeiffer, Carl Pope, Yvonne Welbon. [Review by Jerry Saltz, "My Sixth Sense, " Village Voice, March 29-April 4, 2000.] 4to (10.5 x 9 in.), pictorial stiff wraps. First ed.
NEW YORK (NY). Whitney Museum of American Art.
2002 Biennial.
March 7-May 26, 2002.
Chief curator Lawrence Rinder. The largest Biennial since 1981 including works by 113 artists and collaborative teams from 20 states and Puerto Rico. Black artists included (among others): Tony Cokes, Sanford Biggers, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Ouattara Watts, William Pope.L, Lorna Simpson, Rosie Lee Tompkins.
NEW YORK (NY). Whitney Museum of American Art.
Political Nature.
December 2, 2004-March 27, 2005.
Group exhibition of works on paper by four contemporary artists, including Trenton Doyle Hancock.
PASSARIANO (Italy). Villa Manin Centro d'Arte Contemporanea.
Infinite Painting: Contemporary Painting and Global Realism.
April 9-September 24, 2006.
Exhib. cat., illus. Group exhibition of sixty international artists. Curated by Francesco Bonami and Sarah Canarutto. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock, Ellen Gallagher, Wangechi Mutu.
PEEKSKILL (NY). Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art.
Reverence.
May 20-July 29, 2007.
Group exhibition. Included: Radcliffe Bailey, Leonardo Drew, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Tim Rollins and K.O.S.
PEEKSKILL (NY). Hudson Valley Center for Contemporary Art.
SIZE MATTERS: XXL- recent Large-scale paintings.
Thru November 10, 2007.
Group exhibition. Included: Mark Bradford, Trenton Doyle Hancock.
PHILADELPHIA (PA). Fabric Workshop and Museum.
On the Wall: Wallpaper and Tableau.
May 9-September 13, 2003.
Group exhibition. Work by 35 artists. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock, Lonnie Graham, Renée Green, Glenn Ligon, Will Stokes, Jr., Carrie Mae Weems.
PHILADELPHIA (PA). Fabric Workshop and Museum.
Swarm.
December 3, 2005-March 18, 2006.
96 pp. exhib. cat., color illus. Curated by Abbott Miller and Ellen Lupton. Texts by Marion Boulton Stroud, Abbott Miller, Ellen Lupton, and William Smith. Includes: Mark Bradford, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Julie Mehretu, Paul Pfeiffer.
PHILADELPHIA (PA). Samuel S. Fleisher Art Memorial.
Rich Text.
January 22-February 21, 2009.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock, Jayson Musson and Jina Valentine.
PURCHASE (NY). Neuberger Museum of Art, SUNY-Purchase.
Living With Art: Collecting Contemporary in Metro New York.
May 1-August 15, 2010.
Group exhibition of works from six area collections. Curated by Helaine Posner. Included: El Anatsui, Trenton Doyle Hancock, Martin Puryear.
SAN ANTONIO (TX). Russell Hill Rogers Galleries, Navarro Campus, Southwest School of Art & Craft.
Texas Draws 1.
July 2-September 6, 2009.
Group exhibition. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock.
SAN FRANCISCO (CA). Contemporary Jewish Museum.
In the Beginning: Artists Respond to Genesis.
June 8, 2008-January 4, 2009.
Group exhibition of 9 artists. Included: Trenton Doyle Hancock and Jacob Lawrence.
SOLLINS, SUSAN and MARYBETH SOLLINS, ed.
Art 21: art in the twenty-first century 2.
New York: Abrams, 2003.
216 pp., mostly color illus. Interviews and essay by Susan Sollins. Includes: Trenton Doyle Hancock, Paul Pfeiffer, Martin Puryear, Kara Walker. [Companion volume to the PBS series of artist interviews - separate entry.] 4to (30 cm.), hardback.
WARSAW (Poland). Zacheta National Gallery of Art.
Black Alphabet: conTEXTS of contemporary african-american art.
September 22-November 19, 2006.
Group exhibition. Curator Maria Brewinska. 84 works by the following artists: Laylah Ali, Edgar Arceneaux, John Bankston, Sanford Biggers, Mark Bradford, Michael Paul Britto, Nick Cave, Zoe Charlton, Leonardo Drew, Ellen Gallagher, Trenton Doyle Hancock, David Hammons, Leslie Hewitt, Shaun El C. Leonardo, Glenn Ligon, Kalup Linzy, Wardell Milan, Rodney McMillian, Lester Julian Merriweather, Kori Newkirk, Demetrius Oliver, Kambui Olujimi, Jefferson Pinder, Robert Pruitt, Bayeté Ross-Smith (performance), Lorna Simpson, Xaviera Simmons, Susan Smith-Pinelo, Jeff Sonhouse, Kara Walker, Carrie Mae Weems, Fred Wilson, Kehinde Wiley, Paula Wilson, and Hank Willis Thomas.