Rodney McMillian: Some lives in the sunshine

Saturday, January 10, 2026 at 1:00 PM to Sunday, March 1, 2026 at 1:00 PM

Vielmetter Los Angeles, Los Angeles

Vielmetter Los Angeles is pleased to present Rodney McMillian’s solo exhibition Some lives in the sunshine, opening January 10 and on view through March 1, 2026.McMillian’s practice spans painting, video, sculpture, and installation and is grounded in research into the intersections of race, class, and power as they shape both the history and present of American lives and land. His new body of work comprises sculptures, works on paper, and paintings that examine the history of redlining and predatory lending in the United States—discriminatory practices that persist long after being ruled illegal and continue to structure the nation’s unequal, racially inflected distribution of wealth.Working with nontraditional, utilitarian materials such as house paint, chicken wire, blankets, and bed sheets, McMillian’s paintings and sculptures allude to domestic spaces while engaging modernist traditions of the ready-made and found object. He has incorporated thrifted materials or post-consumer objects into his practice for decades, often leaving price tags and stains intact; these traces of prior use and value provide fertile ground for new narratives. In this exhibition, materials include piggy banks and furniture modified with black protuberances formed from duck cloth and chicken wire, as well as blankets and citations. The paintings and drawings in Some lives in the sunshinereference the boisterous pink and violet palette of magic hour—colors shaped equally by pollution and refraction—alongside the unequal access to economic sustainability experienced beneath the solar glow.In a series of works on paper that builds on his 2020 exhibition Body Politic, McMillian pairs quotes from articles and publications addressing the history and ongoing effects of discriminatory housing policies, from the 1940s to the present, with poured paint sunsets. These works draw on texts such as Richard Rothstein’s The Color of Law: A Forgotten History of How Our Government Segregated America and Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor’s Race for Profit: How Banks and the Real Estate Industry Undermined Black Homeownership. The formal relationship between text and landscape mirrors how these policies have seeped into the nation’s lived infrastructure, continuing to produce tangible consequences on both personal and political levels. Shown alongside a new poured landscape on a thrifted quilt and a stretched canvas featuring a poured landscape and black excrescence, the drawings extend the artist’s long-standing examination of the violence embedded in the abstraction of histories and legacies of slavery and systemic racism.Throughout the gallery, repurposed piggy banks and furniture are installed as sculptural works, their forms altered with additions of chicken wire, duck cloth, and black paint. These ghostly appendages evoke body parts, tumors, and severed casts. While the post-consumer objects themselves conjure the myth of the American Dream and its economic aspirations, the ominous, undulating forms introduce an atmosphere of foreboding and unease. In other works, a metal lamp and an oak cabinet are alternately permeated and engulfed by shadowy shapes, suggesting black holes, orifices, malignant growths, or portals. For McMillian, these interventions reference speculative fiction by writers such as Octavia E. Butler and Ursula Le Guin, in which time, space, and social constructs of race, class, and gender are imagined as porous and nonlinear.McMillian’s landscape paintings further articulate the environmental aftermath of these historical policies. One painting features a black double rainbow constructed from the same chicken wire and duck cloth used in the sculptures, its arcs anchored by a dramatic sky swirling with teal, pink, and black house paint. The rainbow appears as a thick, monochromatic, intestinal form, ruptured and cleft in places. Another landscape depicts a line of sinuous, tree-like forms beneath an ominous yellow-and-blue sun, drawing out the hues of the handmade quilt that serves as its ground. By incorporating cast-off bedding and bed sheets into these works, McMillian summons an absent body into the environments he creates, its ghostly presence palpable in the carefully stitched seams and signs of wear embedded in the fabric.