Low Resolution: Can’t See You proposes a dialogue between the recent works of Johan Samboní (b. 1995, Cali, Colombia) and Hunter Whitaker-Morrow (b. 1995, Los Angeles, CA). Both artists engage with mainstream media, screens, video, and pixels through the filter of their particular cultural and social contexts: Samboní’s life in an under-resourced neighborhood in Cali—the Colombian city with the largest Afro-Colombian population— and Whitaker-Morrow’s upbringing amidst a family close to the cinema industry in Los Angeles. 

The works make use of video, videogames, and Hito Steyerl’s concept of “the poor image” to confront the perceived neutrality of audiovisual media, highlighting the relationship between low-resolution formats and racialized contexts, as well as refusing “narrative certainty, visual fixity, and temporal closure.” 

Samboní’s pieces in the show draw heavily on the game Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, which was first released in 2004, but was only available to the artist many years later via bootlegged versions in which pixelated images still glitched upon use. By representing these glitches through painting and staging peaceful walks in the otherwise violent video game, Samboní reflects on his access to technology as an afrodescendant in Colombia, while highlighting the relationships he built with American culture and aesthetics—an influx of which was significant through video games— that were both cemented and distorted by necessity to make sense of them in the context of Cali. His work aims to highlight the term “low resolution” as ambiguous, whereby a piece of low-resolution media can have a relation to a non-resolved issue in the material world. 

Whitaker-Morrow’s works approach the instability of the image from a different cultural proximity. Through custom software systems authored in Max/MSP/Jitter and processes such as data-moshing, he produces images that collapse in real time. In Live Signal Mosh Test, a documentary on legendary jazz drummer Elvin Jones is subject to two different types of custom data moshing, causing pixels to shift improperly and react to the decibels of the video. As Jones’ drumming gets louder, the image of his body is destroyed, summoning eerie images of lynching. Whitaker-Morrow’s tech expertise in the destabilization of video image both points to the materiality of the medium, while creating images that, by straining visibility, also strain our capacity to conceive mass-media images as neutral. 

Hunter Whitaker-Morrow

Hunter Whitaker-Morrow (b. 1995, Los Angeles, CA) is an artist who works in modes of audiovisual performance, installation, and experimental documentary. His work, both structuralist and conceptual, centers on an exploration of the moving image as socio-historical text and the activation of audiovisual constructions to serve as instruments of cultural supersession. Informed by his academic background in sociology and moving-image theory in concert with a depth of experience working in the television industry, Whitaker-Morrow investigates the physical, technological, and sociopolitical dimensions of audiovisual constructions.

Originally from Los Angeles, he holds an MFA with a concentration in film, video, and new media from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago and a dual BA in film and media studies and sociology from Amherst College

Johan David Samboni Esquivel

Johan David Samboni Esquivel (b. 1995, Cali, Colombia) is an artist from eastern Cali, Colombia whose work examines social realities that are part of his immediate environment, focusing on reflections and questions on the representation of marginality and the identities that inhabit it. He recently participated in the Bogotá and Medellín Biennials, as well as in the Wrong Biennale in Moscow. He held his first solo exhibition at the Museum of Modern Art in Medellín (MAMM) and has participated in multiple group exhibitions in spaces such as La Tertulia Museum in Cali, the Museo de Antioquia, Galería Santa Fé and Espacio Odeón in Bogotá, and the Rayo Museum in Roldanillo. Samboni has been the recipient of different recognitions, such as the C Digital Art Program Award, the National Recognition of the XVII Regional Artist Salons of the Colombian Ministry of Culture, and the Artecámara Award in alliance with El Tiempo, ArtBo 2019. His work is part of the collections of the Banco de la República, Museum of Modern Art of Medellín (MAMM), Museo La Tertulia, Museo Armando Martins in Lisboa, and the Museo Rayo. He holds a Master of Fine Arts from the Departmental Institute of Fine Arts in Cali.

Inés Arango-Guingue

Inés Arango-Guingue is a Colombian curator and writer. In recent years, her research has focused on art and philosophy that acknowledges the social power of the unknown, the opaque, and the illegible. 

She is co-curator of Learning Together: Art Education and Community at the University of Illinois – Chicago’s Gallery 400, a major exhibition centering the progressive art pedagogy of a diverse group of Chicago artist educators from the mid-1960s through the 2010s. In addition, she organized exhibitions at the Mildred’s Lane Complex(ity) in Narrowsburg, New York; Museo del Banco de la Republica in Bogotá; Flora Ars + Natura in Bogotá; and Casona de Linea in Havana, Cuba. She was a 2023 Art Table fellow and a 2022 Abakanowicz fellow at SAIC’s Institute for Curatorial Research and Practice. She is a contributing author to the upcoming book Tuning Calder’s Clouds, to be published by The Calder Foundation and the Curtis R. Priem Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center.

Opening Reception:

ACRE Projects Lakeview
2921 N Clark St
Chicago , IL 60657

Wheelchair Accessible

ACRE Projects is on the ground level with a 4-inch step to enter the building. The bathroom is wheelchair accessible. Masks are not required to enter the space but we do have masks available upon request. For additional information, please contact the gallery’s accessibility coordinator Lauren Leving at exhibitions@acreresidency.org