Bases Loaded
Jordan Eagles

Bases Loaded is a solo exhibition by New York–based artist Jordan Eagles that uses baseball—a sport long mythologized as “America’s pastime”—to examine ideas of team, identity, and belonging in contemporary American culture. Since the late 1990s, Eagles has explored the aesthetic power and ethical stakes of blood as a material across installation, sculpture, photography, and painting, using it to probe embodiment, spirituality, and social norms.

A lifelong New York Mets fan, Eagles was struck by the slogan printed on T‑shirts given to blood donors at Citi Field: “The Mets are in our blood.” While his love of the team was inherited from his family, he himself is barred from participating in these blood drives by policies that discriminate against gay men. The phrase became a prompt for him: What is in our blood, and who is allowed to belong—to a team, a family, a nation?

For Bases Loaded, Eagles sourced these giveaway T‑shirts, cropped them, and splattered each with blood drawn from an HIV‑positive gay man, confronting ongoing prejudice against queer bodies and sexual practices. Grouped by color in formations that echo offensive and defensive lines on a baseball diamond, the shirts also evoke the division of the United States into “red” and “blue” camps, underscoring how seemingly neutral fandom is entangled with politics and identity.

The exhibition further considers how baseball and queer cultures share a charged language of bodies and roles. Euphemisms like “first base” and “second base” frame early sexual experience through the sport, while positions such as pitcher and catcher double as metaphors for sexual roles. Eagles’s work threads these associations into a broader narrative of identity formation, desire, and stigma, asking how metaphors shape who is marked as inside or outside the norm.

Surrounding the shirts is a series of resin works cast in the shape of home plate, embedding family ephemera and medical detritus: black nitrile gloves, baby‑blue scrubs, and face guards that recall an umpire’s gear; childhood photographs of Eagles in Mets apparel with his father; and vials of blood drawn from the artist, his father, and a friend. Large, wall‑mounted reproductions of New York Post covers extend these themes into the realm of popular media, reframing sensational headlines about Mets star Mike Piazza’s sexuality and intercity baseball rivalries as part of a broader culture of speculation, spectacle, and bias. In bringing together the intimate and the institutional, Bases Loaded exposes the blood, labor, and prejudice beneath the polished image of team sports.

Jordan Eagles (b. 1977) is an artist who has been exploring the aesthetics and ethics of blood as an artistic medium since the late 1990s. His works are held in numerous private and public collections, including the Addison Gallery of American Art, Everson Museum of Art, Peabody Essex Museum, Princeton University Art Museum, University of Michigan Museum of Art, and Wellcome Collection. Based in New York, Eagles has presented exhibitions, installations, and public programs at institutions that include the Getty (Los Angeles, CA), High Museum of Art (Atlanta, GA), The Andy Warhol Museum (Pittsburgh, PA), Birmingham Civil Rights Institute (Alabama), The High Line (New York, NY), and Hammer Museum (Los Angeles, CA). The artist also collaborated with the NYC Department of Health and Mental Hygiene on NYC Blood Sure and—in partnership with GMHC and FCB Health—is a co-founder of Blood Equality.

Jordan Eagles: Bases Loaded is curated by Gabriel Florenz. It is supported, in part, by the Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts and by public funds from New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in Partnership with the City Council and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.