Q&A with Jerome "Chu" Charles

Casey Droege and Jerome Chu presenting at the reception in the Project Space gallery in front of sitting audience.

In Still Good, Chu puts the animate in inanimate; staying on brand, his art practice relays a deeper connection to the discarded, and finds the potential in the “damaged” or “no longer useful” through whimsical yet stern optimism. We caught up with the artist for a Q&A.

Still Good at the CDCP Project Space in Wilkinsburg is up thru 2/9. Gallery hours are Fri 2-7, Sat + Sun 12-5.

Tell us your history

Born June 15th, 1985 in Honolulu, Hawaii to a Haitian father in the US Navy and a Black American woman from DC and California. Moved around a lot - 5 elementary schools, 3 middle schools, 1 high school. 4-6th grade was spent in Guam, which was a magical experience for a 9-year-old. I also lived in Manila for 6 months after I graduated from High School when my dad joined the State Department and we became diplomats, which was also pretty magical for an 18-year-old.

My mother crafted my entire life - painting on wood cutouts to rubber stamping, a huge endeavor - so I was always around some kind of art. While her mother was younger, she was a makeup artist in Hollywood and worked on the set of the Thriller video, and would regularly house sit for Vincent Price.

Outside of making pulley systems in my room out of K’nex or piggybacking off of my mom’s interests, I didn’t get serious about making my own until I got my first digital camera when I was 16, which I bought with the money I got from my first job - at a movie theater. I was an amateur photographer with aims to be a famous party photographer (lol okay 2008!) and got the opportunity to move to NYC where I interned for podcast Keith and The Girl. Through them and the comedians they had on their show, I was able to become a freelance photographer and further develop my interest in portraiture. 

I moved to Pittsburgh after a one-weekend visit in October 2010, because I was absorbing all kinds of bad energy from New York and I needed a break. I graduated from the Art Institute of Pittsburgh with a certificate in Portrait Photography in 2013. During that time, I was also doing graffiti behind the scenes as Chu.

Graffiti has always been of interest to me as a narcissist. My first exposure to it was in Guam, a 36 mile in circumference Island in Micronesia in the western Pacific Ocean, when I would see all of the boys in class practicing “bombing” letters. From there I fell in love with signing yearbooks simply because it cemented the idea of being remembered, which was probably important for me as a traveling military kid. Around the time I was 20 I was visiting Richmond VA and DC a lot, and I started seeing the tag “Borf” in both places. My mind was blown - being able to recognize a “signature” across multiple spaces - why wouldn’t I want that for myself?! 

So Pittsburgh ended up being the first place in my life where I was an unsupervised adult, with way too much free time and no one to spend it with. Fast forward to the Graffiti Task Force raiding my house with a search warrant, me ending up turning myself in for 65 counts of criminal mischief, totaling $47,000 and incurring a $100,000 bond for my first-time criminal offense. 

I got my first art show ever 3 months after I got out of my 6 days in jail in April of 2016, where I showed art as “Chu” for the first time since the papers outed me anyways. I sold 39/47 of the pieces I made, some of which were on cardboard, all sourced from trash pickup days in Lawrenceville and Goodwill. Since then I’ve had 3 more solo shows, a residency at the Ace Hotel, I partnered up with other local graffiti writer Max “Gems” Gonzales and together we have curated on 7 group shows, focusing on outsider art and people of color, one of which we were able to produce with a grant from that we were awarded from the Greater Pittsburgh Arts Council - the Glow Up  - 40 visual artists of color in varying levels of their artistic careers were given stipends to make/complete art for the show. From there, Max and I have become muralists and hope to continue to use our artistic energy for mostly good. Mostly.

Jerome Chu paintings and other artwork in the interior of the Project Space gallery

If you had to categorize yourself, what would it be?

A hot gay mess. But also a photographer, illustrator, and muralist.

 

Can you talk a bit about your process? Have you always included objects in your practice? Is it new?  

Everything non-photography related that I’ve done, I’ve only been doing since 2011, so it’s still in its toddler stage. Because no one thought to give ME any Adderall or Ritalin (or weed), I didn’t have the patience to know that I could draw, until I started practicing graffiti in blackbooks (where I also didn’t have the patience to ONLY draw my name, so I started teaching myself how to draw because I was smoking hella weed at that point.)

I only started including objects into my painting practices when I did my residency at the Ace Hotel. They gave me an auxiliary room to paint the walls and whatever furniture I brought into there, within a 24 hour period. I would have stayed up the entire night but I had court for my graffiti stuff the next morning, my birthday. What a life.

 
How do you source your materials? 

My dog walking has been integral to my art practice, as it gave me a cover to be roaming the neighborhoods at all hours while I was doing graffiti; now it’s useful in giving me a reason to roam my neighborhood streets and see frames and shapes that people throw away. Other than that, I’m a regular at Goodwill in Lawrenceville.

What’s the significance of that? 

Since I’m still a widdle baby artist with a small amount of attention and not that much-developed skill, I like to rely on the pre-existing backgrounds of the paintings I find. The things I FIND I collect like a packrat, hoping that one day they’ll be useful. The things I BUY, I very much enjoy anything that looks like it would be hanging in a motel lobby, things that have circles in them or have elements that would allow for circles (because of the shape of my tag, which I shoehorn into everything.)

Where do you want to go with your work? 

I’m having the best time simultaneously developing my illustrating ability and my technique as a painter. I pour all of my ideas into the sketchbooks that I make at my job at the print shop and paint them when the right idea meets the right canvas. I hope to continue to work on my ability to use humor (and cuteness lol) in my artwork, even when dealing with big emotional emotions, which I’m not the best at yet.

 

If you could make anything what would you do?

I’d tag the moon. 

Jerome Chu. Plastic Bag, 2020, $175. Tropical landscape with palms, boats, human figure and attached plastic bags.

Jerome Chu. Plastic Bag, 2020, $175. Tropical landscape with palms, boats, human figure and attached plastic bags.

The last SIX x ATE of the 2019 season is coming up!

Six by Ate North logo on dark purple background

SIX x ATE: North will feature eco-focused artists and projects from Ann Rosenthal, Eric Fisher, Lindsey French, Shohei Katayama, Theresa Baughman, Trevor Lee at Eden Hall Campus Chatham University (6035 Ridge Road Gibsonia, PA 15044)

VIP* 6:00 - 7:00PM
Event 6:30 - 9:00PM

*VIP level support allows us to continue to offer free and discounted tickets to those who can’t afford to attend, which is critical in delivering accessible art experiences. VIP also includes an exclusive tour of the art collection at Edan Hall Campus!

Learn more about our presenting artists and purchase tickets today!

Announcing the artists presenting at SIX x ATE: West!

west.png

SIX x ATE: West will feature members of Associated Artists of Pittsburgh at The Westmoreland Museum of American Art on Thursday, November 14th.

VIP* 6:00 - 7:00PM
Event 6:30 - 9:00PM
Tickets on sale now!

Presenting artists include Phiris Kathryn Sickels, Alejandro Fiez, Cara Livorio, Stephanie Martin, Reba Harmon, and Rachel Saul Rearick & Katie Rearick who are all included in the AAP Annual. You’ll have a chance to hear from the artists themselves and explore the exhibition to see their work in person!

*VIP level support allows us to continue to offer free and discounted tickets to those who can’t afford to attend, which is critical in delivering accessible art experiences.

Learn more about our presenting artists and purchase tickets today!

Meet the Interns: Anastasia Goldina

thumbnail_image1-1.jpg

For this round of Meet the Interns, we’re highlighting Anastasia! Anastasia has been interning with CDCP since early this summer, and is still with us, helping out in all parts of the organization! We interviewed her recently to get to know her better, and so you can know her too!

1) Can you tell me a little about yourself (what you do, where you're from, how long you've been in Pittsburgh)?

It’s been almost two years since I immigrated to Pittsburgh from Moscow with my family. I graduated ABD from Moscow Lomonosov University with a major in art history and then started assisting my husband with running a fine art and antiques business for about 10 years.


2) Since I haven't worked with you too much, what kind of work do you do for your internship at cdcp?

I started as a PPF volunteer this year. Currently I'm working with Casey on a grant project meant to help emerging local artists find new distribution channels and become economically sustainable. My intern responsibilities include collecting data and exploring the market.


3) What made you come to Pittsburgh?

Our relatives live here, that's why it was our first choice. Initially, we were going to spend a year here and then move to a larger city. Eventually, we liked Pgh so much that decided to stay here.


4) What are you favorite things to do in town?

Visiting museums and galleries. Going to the ballet, opera and symphony performances. Walking to the parks and playgrounds with my daughter. Strolling around nice neighborhoods like Squirrel Hill, Shadyside, Point Breeze.


5) Do you have any favorite artists in pittsburgh or at small mall?

I appreciate the works of Vanessa German and Thaddeus Mosley. Being closer to the local art scene and its backstage is one of the greatest perks of the internship. I was fascinated by the sculptural thread drawings by Nicole Czapinski I saw at Small Mall.


6) Do you do any art yourself? If so, what do you do?

Hardly I have ever been able to make anything really beautiful with my own hands. That's why I admire persons with that particular mindset who create Things out of nothing.

Interested in interning for CDCP? We’re always looking for interns to help us with the nitty gritty tasks. Shoot an email to Eriko at eriko@caseydroege.com to learn more about being a part of our team!

SIX X ATE: East is next week! Do you have your ticket?

east.png

SIX x ATE: East will feature our CSA PGH artists and will take place at The GYM at Butler St. Lofts on Thursday, October 24th.

VIP* 6:00 - 7:00PM
Event 6:30 - 9:00PM
Tickets on sale now!

Featured artists include Alexandra Lakin, atiya jones, Darrin Milliner, Jamie Earnest, Matthew Van Asselt, and Soren Lundi, who all created work for the 2019 season of CSA PGH. Not unlike the boxes of fruit and vegetables that one might get from a local farm as an agricultural CSA, CSA PGH creates “shares” of art to feed the public’s cultural appetite. CSA PGH builds lasting relationships with artists and cultural consumers.

Learn more about their work below and purchase tickets today!

All 2019 logos by Christina Lee.

Our Design Sponsor is Dutchess and the Queen.

We’d like to thank our 2019 sponsors 84 Lumber, Brew House Lofts and TREK Development Group, Chatham University, Revive Marketing Group, and The Westmoreland Museum of American Art. We’re thankful to partnerships with the Associated Artists of Pittsburgh, Beauty Shoppe, and the Brew House Association. Additional support provided by ASCEND, City Theatre Company, and YOU - our audience!