Aryel “Ariel” René JacksonSelected ExhibitionsInstallations


Resonant Landscapes:
Sci-Fi Narratives and Historical Echoes
2024
A solo exhibition presented at Ivester Contemporary in Austin, TX from September to October, 2024. The exhibition features mixed media works that combine video, painting, and sculpture to merge speculative, historical imagery, and references to science-fiction motifs. Jackson creates tactile and visual narratives that move between natural and constructed environments. 

Works include a multi-channel video installation, textured paintings, and sculptural forms that evoke themes of landscape, dwelling, and environmental change, inviting reflection on the intersections of place, history, and imagination. 






What it means: 
iterations of a welcoming place
2023–2024
  •      HOST: Aryel René Jackson was on view from September 28. 2023 to January 28. 2024 at the Jones Center. 

  •       In this commissioned installation titled “What it means: iterations of a welcoming place,” Jackson works across sculpture, video, sound, and performance to explore landscape as a site of personal representation.  The work inhabits a space between painting and sculpture, between abstraction and representation, forming an imagined topography that merges figural imagery with geographic elements.







A Welcoming Place
2020–2022
  •      Solo exhibition at Women & Their Work (Jan 18–March 3, 2022). The film-based installation combined recorded conversations with Black and Brown Indigenous residents of Austin with re-animated archival footage, including meteorological imagery and scenes of community life. 

  •       Jackson appears holding a black weather balloon, using it as a metaphor for gauging a place’s atmosphere. The work weaves personal testimony, place-based observation, and archival material to reflect on how communities experience and respond to environmental and social conditions.  






We are the [Hackers], Baby, 
[Hackers] are we
2021
  •      A Tito’s Prize exhibition at Big Medium by artists Aryel “Ariel” René Jackson and Michael J. Love, performing as their alter egos Confuserella and Babé. The project imagined a Black futuristic location where wormholes connect past and present, blending personal research, rhythm tap dance, and multi-camera documentation.  







Descendance
2021
Centers on a drone-filmed video performance situated inside an emptied swimming pool at Seattle's George Washington Carver Center. In the film, interdisciplinary tap dancer Michael J. Love moves across a large American flag stenciled in topsoil. As Love dances, the flag's form transforms, turning choreography into a living soil-map of generational lineage, cultural inheritance, and embodied history. 

The film is supported by original music by Jazz composer Joseph C. Dyson Jr., whose score underscores the choreography and temporal weight of the soil-flag transformation. Additionally, the pool design was executed by Eto Otitigbe, whose minimalist interventions intersect the stenciled flag as a permanent backdrop to the ephemeral nature of soil. 











The next life of property:
Grandma never believed in hell
2019
UT Austin graduation thesis. The installation includes a wooden platform with a circular soil marking, a metal bucket, and woven basket tools. Rows of soil and bare floor are patterned with large swept circles, and a green chalkboard displays a simple chalk outline of a chair. On another wall, an upturned wooden chair with broom heads, plaster-mold legs, and poles is mounted over a chalk-drawn U.S. Flag. 

During performances, collaborators Aryel “Ariel” René Jackson and Michael J. Love sweep soil into circles, tap dance on the surface, and move earth from the bucket, creating visual patterns and rhythmic sounds. The work combines sculpture, soil drawings, and live action, blending references to classrooms, yards, and ceremonial spaces. 




The (next) life of property
24 x 72 x 30
Ruby City (2021 Texas Biennial: A New Landscape, A Possible Horizon) family chair, flag poles, broom corn, cement, soil, chalk, paint on wall.  








The future is a constant wake
2019
Presented in a range of contexts, including its initial debut in collaboration with Michael J. Love for the SXSW Art Program in Austin, TX (2019), the group exhibition “Dear Future...” at the University of Northern Colorado’s Campus Commons Gallery (2021), and “Tending Land” curated by Amin Alsaden at the Digital Arts Resource Centre in Ottawa, ON (2022).

In 2021, the work was featured in “Lux Aeterna” at the Jacob Lawrence Gallery, University of Washington, curated by Emily Zimmerman and organized in partnership with Northwest Film Forum. In 2023, it received the Juried Award in the Time-Based category at ArtPrize, presented by juror Coka Treviño. In the same year, it was included as part of “This Place We Once Remembered” curated by Rachel Gugelberger in collaboration with Gabriel de Guzman at Wave Hill in the Bronx, NY. Across these presentations, the work has been adapted for different sites and audiences, taking the form of live performance, projected video, and installation. Watch an excerpt here.










Its Extended Remnant
2019
A video installatino that interprets a rusted swingblade–once owned by Jackson’s grandma–as a palimpsest. A chalk appendage is added to the blade, evoking its former utility while referencing the passage of time and memory. The swingblade symbolizes a familiar and agricultural legacy, connecting personal history to material form, especially within the context of land loss due to racist lending practices. 

The work was included in “In Practice: Other Objects” at SculptureCenter, an exhibition curated by Gee Wesley in 2019, exploring how the lives of objects extend beyond their immediate function or context. The show gathered artists whose work examines the shifting status of material things, considering how objects can be repurposed, reimagined, or reactivated as vessels of history, narrative, or speculation. 

Jackson approaches the piece as a way of tending to and sustaining memory, engaging with the legacies of family and place through the transformation of inherited materials. Watch an excerpt here.

 









Color Composition
2018
A site-specific installation created for the Museum of Human Achievement’s “Cage Match Project” in East Austin, Texas. The work consists of soil arranged within a constructed environment alongside latex balloons, spray paint, string, and wire, spanning approximately 8 x 7 x 20 feet. 

A redline map of Austin serves as a key reference material, informing the spatial arrangement and color placement within the installation. Installed directly in the space, the piece engages with the room’s dimensions and surfaces, integrating suspended and grounded elements to create a composition shaped by both material qualities and historical cartography. 








Suspended Grid
2018
Sculptural work documented in a short video. Installed at Sweet Pass Sculpture Part as part of “May Show: Looms” (2019)–curated by Partial Shade in collaboration with SMU’s Pollock Gallery. The piece features a suspended framework that suggests both a net and a grid. It’s form hangs above the ground, creating an interplay between structure and open space. The work engages with ideas of connection, containment, and spatial mapping, inviting viewers to consider how boundaries and openings shape perception. 

“Suspended Grid” draws structural inspiration from the “Connect Four” game, scaling up its familiar vertical grid into a large, outdoor installation. The grid functions not only as a visual framework but also as a participatory structure. Individual “playing pieces” reference intersectionality identifiers–such as race, gender, sexuality, and other identity categories–inviting participants to engage with the work by placing these markers within the grid. Chalk is provided so visitors can inscribe their own identifiers onto pieces, allowing each participant to effectively become a “playable” element in the structure. Through this format, the work transforms a familiar game into an interactive exploration of identity, visibility, and how individual positions intersect within a larger social framework. 








Broom Grid
2018
An installation incorporating chalkboard paint, chalk, video projection, MDF board, a binder (Gac 400), and locally sourced topsoil. Featuring a gridded surface for chalk markings that can be made and erased, overlaid with projected video imagery, the work combines tactile and digital elements to invite interaction and repeated engagement, with the grid functioning as both a literal and symbolic framework.  

In 2018, it was presented in “A Recounting: Data, Disinformation & Black Experience” at Guerrero Gallery in San Francisco, curated by Elisa Durette, which examined how informatino–both factual and distorted–has been used to shape narratives about Black life in the United States, drawing on sources from W.E.B. Du Bois’s sociological charts to contested studies such as the Moynihan Report and “The Bell Curve” to explore the influence of data, statistics, and everyday knowledge on public perception, historical record, and lived experience.  








The Blues Data Crop: 
The Gains and Losses of Black Farmers in America
2016 
A mixed-media installation combining textile-based wall works and sculptural forms arranged in planted rows of soil. The installation features quilted panels made from screen-printed and sourced fabrics, peiced together to reimagine archival photographs and introduce new visual elements that suggest alternate possibilities. 

Alongside these, upright plant-like sculptures constructued from wood, muslin, found fabric, and wire bear typewritten historical text on their elongated leaves. Controlled ink bleeds alter the legibility of the printed words, making the information alternatley accessible or obscured. Together, the components explore agricultural histories connected to Black farmers, layering factual records with material interventions to consider both what is preserved and what is left out of the documented narrative. 






The Origin of the Blues
2015
Presented at the RISD Museum from July 2017 to February 2018 and was the subject of an interview conducted by Amber Lopez, then Nancy Prophet Fellow at RISD. The conversation explored the influences, symbolism, and creative process behind the work, situating it within Jackson’s broader Afrofuturist practice, which blends science fiction, fantasy, and Afrocentric elements to create alternative narratives and characters. 

In this piece, Jackson’s alter ego, Confuserella, journeys from the fictional world of Panrika to Plastica to examine the history, conditions, and origins of blues music. Using stop-motion animation, 3-D compositing, sound design, and archival footage, the video juxtaposes scenes of racially motivated violence with moments from everyday Black life, underscoring the coexistence of brutality and normalcy in Black communities. The reference to “blues” extends beyond the musical genre to the color itself, symbolizing an effort to “turn down” the intensity of trauma so that healing can occur. Jackson’s wider body of work–including video, animation, performance, and sculpture–continues to explore historical memory and cultural identity. Watch an excerpt here.










Home AKA Media Lab
2015
This immersive environment brought together Jackson’s suite of Confuserella videos–
”The Origin of the Blues” (2015), “BAM AKA By Any Means Incorporated”, “Blues Note (Feelings)”, “Confuserella’s Lab: Media Bay”, “The Confuserella Show (aka I Need a Shrink)”, and “What Are the Blues.”

Centered on the character Confuserella, an immigrant from the planet Panfrika to Plastica, the installation presented these works as interconnected “reports” mapping the character’s navigation of racial politics, historical memory, and real-life trauma. Drawing on Afrofuturist cartography, the videos layered fictional geographies with lived Black experiences, using archival material, animation, performance, and digital compositing to chart emotional, historical, and political terrain. Framed in the spirit of “Intersecting Imaginaries” (2015), curated in part by Dalaeja Foreman and Eva Mayhabal Davis, “Home AKA Media Lab” positioned these speculative maps within a broader conversation on place, identity, and shifting communal landscapes.