• American, b. 1990 Lives and works in Oakland, CA Adrian Burrell’s practice includes photography, film, installation, and experimental media. His...
    Photo: Dondre Stuetley

    American, b. 1990 

    Lives and works in Oakland, CA 

     

    Adrian Burrell’s practice includes photography, film, installation, and experimental media. His work examines the intersections of race, class, and intergenerational dynamics, inviting moments where collective storytelling creates space for remembrance. 
     
    Burrell’s work has been the subject of the recent solo exhibitions Venus Blues at the Minnesota Street Project Foundation (2023), and Sugarcane and Lightning pt 3 at the San José ICA, CA (2022), each investigating his own family history — archival, speculative, and fictional — as a means of understanding Black life, history, resistance, and liberation in America. 
     
    A third-generation Oakland artist and US Marine Corps veteran, Burrell received his BFA in Film from the San Francisco Art Institute, CA and MFA from Stanford University’s Department of Art & Art History, where he was also a visiting artist with Stanford’s Institute for Diversity in Arts (2022). Burrell has been awarded the Black Freedom Fellowship, Salvador, Brazil (2023); Black Rock Senegal Residency, Dakar, Senegal (2022); SFFILM FilmHouse Residency, San Francisco, CA (2022); YBCA 100 Creative Cohort Fellowship, Yerba Buena Center for the Arts, San Francisco, CA (2021); and Juror’s Choice Award, SF Camerawork, San Francisco, CA (2019). His works are included in the collections of the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, CA, and Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, CA. His first monograph, Sugarcane and Lightning, was published by Minor Matters in 2023.
     

    Artist CV (PDF)

  • Works
    • Adrian Burrell Can to Can't, 2022 Archival Pigment Print 40 x 26 inches
      Adrian Burrell
      Can to Can't, 2022
      Archival Pigment Print
      40 x 26 inches
    • Adrian Burrell God Don’t Like Ugly, 2020 Archival Pigment Print 60 x 40 inches
      Adrian Burrell
      God Don’t Like Ugly, 2020
      Archival Pigment Print
      60 x 40 inches
    • Adrian Burrell Cyclical Symphony, 2022 Archival Pigment Print 26 x 40 inches
      Adrian Burrell
      Cyclical Symphony, 2022
      Archival Pigment Print
      26 x 40 inches
    • Adrian Burrell Initiation, 2022 Archival Pigment Print 21 x 36 inches
      Adrian Burrell
      Initiation, 2022
      Archival Pigment Print
      21 x 36 inches
    • Adrian Burrell Learning to Swim, 2019 Archival Pigment Print 30.25 x 43.25 inches, framed
      Adrian Burrell
      Learning to Swim, 2019
      Archival Pigment Print
      30.25 x 43.25 inches, framed
    • Adrian Burrell Door of No Return, 2016 Archival Pigment Print 20 x 36 inches
      Adrian Burrell
      Door of No Return, 2016
      Archival Pigment Print
      20 x 36 inches
  • Press
  • Taylor Dafoe, "Critical Geography | FotoFest Biennial 2024, Houston," Photograph, May 1, 2024

    Madison Ford, "FotoFest Biennial 2024: Critical Geography," The Brooklyn Rail, April Issue, 2024

    Michael McCarthy, “Rising Bay Area Artist Adrian L. Burrell Is A Master Storyteller,” San Francisco Magazine, December 5, 2023

    Tony Bravo, “Adrian L. Burrell’s ‘Venus Blues’ bridges Senegal to Oakland through family journey,” San Francisco Chronicle, November 22, 2023

    Max Blue, “Oakland artist reckons with the trans-Atlantic slave trade in new Dogpatch show,” San Francisco Examiner, November 6, 2023

    Mark Taylor, “Singing the "Venus Blues" with Oakland Artist Adrian L. Burrell, “ SF/Arts, September/October, 2023

    Mark Van Proyen, “Adrian L. Burrell’s ‘Venus Blues’ @ MSP Foundation,” Squarecylinder.com, October 30, 2023

    Tony Bravo, “Oakland artist to create new multimedia installation in S.F.’s Dogpatch,” San Francisco Chronicle, July 20, 2023

    Seph Rodney, “Adrian Burrell Explores the Difficulty—and the Promise—of Escaping Black American History,” Art in America, January 26, 2023

    Marke B., “Pop-Up Magazine springs back onstage, with one of Oakland’s best young artists,” 48hills, May 19, 2022

    Maya Chesley, "Shaking the Foundations of the American Dream," The New Yorker, February 2, 2022

    Luke Williams, “At SFMOMA, Adrian L. Burrell’s Collective Self-Portraits Defy Gravity,” KQED, March 31, 2021