JAMES MACDONELL ‘SAFE PASSAGE’

PREVIEW OPENING RECEPTION:Thursday, January 16th 5:30 to 8 pm

Ohr-O’Keefe Museum of Art

386 Beach Blvd., Biloxi, MS 39530

Exhibition Statement

Ohr-O’Keefe Museum of Art is pleased to present Safe Passage, a solo exhibition of works by James Macdonell from 2004-2024. This is the artist’s first solo exhibition with the museum. The exhibition opens January 16, 2025, and will run through June 14, 2025, with an opening reception on Thursday, January 16 from 5:30 – 8 pm.

In James Macdonell’s first solo museum exhibition titled ‘SAFE PASSAGE’ the artist invites the viewer into an examination of our lives, objectively and subjectively, and how art and life intersect. With dignity and appreciation, he investigates familiar subject matter like survival, loss, abandonment, the forces of nature, mythology, and history through the lens of metamorphosis, transmutation, and regeneration. At the core of this exhibition is art incorporated from the observation of daily life. It is meant to inspire people, to give them a new appreciation of self and their surroundings; and serve as affirmation that works can be a catalyst for change in how we view others and our environment. The Safe Passage exhibition is a gateway to connect the conscious and the subconscious worlds through the earthly realms of uncertainty. The art weaves a narrative appreciation for nature and the human experience.

Safe Passage redefines the found object as a precursor. Its intent, theory and practice relate to two of the most influential artists of the 20th century: Marcel Duchamp and Robert Rauschenberg. Both were known for taking everyday objects out of their original context and presenting them as art.

The exhibition in the Frank Gehry designed space incorporates a wide range of mixed media: painting, sculpture, photography, and collage. With Safe Passage James Macdonell creates a sacred space for us to reflect on our respective passages as vessels on this journey. It confronts us to view our lives differently and acknowledge mutual beliefs, connections and/ or disconnections. It points toward the beauty hidden in mundane things. It is a reminder that art and life have something in common:  that their greatness endures only when it is built upon, and arises from, small meaningful acts.