Brigade's current group exhibition brings together five artists to confront the concept of Zugzwang, a situation in chess, where every possible move worsens ones position, mirroring the modern paradox of entrapment in the very systems we have created. Through their works, the exhibition maps this collective paralysis, exposing the invisible rules and strategies that lure us into the system.
Below, Jordan Sears discusses her work, whether or not she plays by the rules, and the absurdity of the game.
Can you expand on the series of work you have included in the exhibition and how you think it relates to the concept of Zugzwang?
Zugzwang became a useful framework for understanding the tensions that already existed within my work. I see a similar condition happening within contemporary image culture. The
structures that shape our desires and identities (advertising, beauty standards, and consumer culture) are also the frameworks through which we understand ourselves. We participate in them even when we recognize their limitations or contradictions. Rather than the work offering a resolution, the paintings remain inside this condition. I'm drawn to the seductive surface of these images while also remaining aware of the structures they reinforce. The work occupies a space between attraction and critique, asking what it means to navigate systems that both produce and constrain our sense of self.