Harman Projects is thrilled to present If Someone Asks This is Where I’ll Be, a solo exhibition of new work by multidisciplinary artist Ravi Zupa. Through cultural and visual mélange in arduously hand-processed work, the Denver-based artist considers how we form and become intimate with our chosen families. Lifting images from various sources, including Japanese ukiyo-e samurai to Aztec codices, 1970s comic books to Basquiat, European crests to the face of a friendly a feral cat named Brenda, this new series of works prompts us to locate elements and expressions of ourselves in others, no matter how contradictory.

While some of Zupa’s pieces appear collage-like, the artist's process always begins with a piece of paper and a pencil. Skillfully sketching his culturally diverse subjects, the artist takes stock of their unique forms and styles. These isolated images are then transformed into prints using various techniques, ranging from screen prints to intaglio and offset lithography. Zupa subsequently tears them apart, skillfully recombining the scraps onto wooden canvases using a matte medium. Using a technique that evokes the methods of artists like Mimo Rotella, Robert Rauschenberg, and Shepard Fairey, Zupa establishes himself in this lineage of artistic disruptors, showing how visual and material histories are as malleable as his compositions.

Inspired by a lyric from the Talking Heads' often-covered love song “This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody)”, the exhibition’s title is an ode to familial ties forged through relationships rather than those determined by birth. Instead of adhering to the conventional belief that blood ties prevail over friendships, Zupa challenges this notion, urging viewers to reconsider the social hierarchies of their close bonds. By interweaving images from seemingly unrelated cultures, aesthetics, and periods, Zupa opens this motley crew of icons to a language of unfamiliar love. So if someone asks, where might we locate Zupa and his work? In a comfortable space of limbo with his friends—after all, blood is mostly water.

Ravi Zupa considers books the best way to experience art. He has spent decades studying books about the art, mythology, religion, and history of cultures from across geography and time. Entirely self-taught, Zupa looks to works by German Renaissance printmakers, Flemish primitives, abstract expressionists, Japanese woodblock artists, and Mughal painters for inspiration. He also frequently incorporates religious iconography from Europe, Asia, and pre-Columbian Latin America with revolutionary propaganda from around the world. With a distaste for ironic art or the thoughtless appropriation of culture, he integrates seemingly unrelated images in search of something universal. Zupa does not create any of his art digitally; everything comes from his hand starting with good old-fashioned pencil and paper.