Walking into Levester Williams’ all matters aside—on view through December 14 at UMBC’s Center for Art, Design, and Visual Culture (CADVC)— viewers first encounter a wall with the exhibition’s title and an installation that functions as a microcosm of the show’s logic. “Double Up (Doubling),” is a pair of mop handles splayed apart: one points to the words, “all matters” and spaced widely to the right, the other to an elision in italics: “aside.” An invitation to the illusion of choice and the power of material narrative as an entry point.
To the left, just past the “all matters” figuration, its relativities are investigated, and to the right, “aside,” interiority, in-jokes, and the power of play take precedent. Referring to the “double consciousness” outlined in DuBois’ The Souls of Black Folk (1903), the titling also seems a dare: double the doubling, and so forth, until you reach infinity, or at least a multitude that cannot be contained. Identities ascribed by an inherently carceral system are both cemented and undone, unstable.
Twin bundles at the base of the piece, set in a matte black material, contain penitentiary sheets described in wall text as “unclean,” setting a tonal precedent that judgments made about moral and material purity are subject to critical review. These both-sides are also the same entire survey, and atop a large plinth directly behind the white wall, the monumental, stiffened rear legs of a bronze horse disrupts a central space with explicative curatorial text that could otherwise be considered a foyer for all matters aside.