Todd Levin, photographed by Tess Mayer inside his Usonian home designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, "The Stuart Richardson House" (1941) with Martín Ramírez, "Untitled (Horse and Rider)". All Artwork images © the Artist.
Curatorial Project 11 - "POWER"
"POWER"
curated by Todd Levin
Sprüth Magers Los Angeles
29 March 2017 - 10 June 2017
Artists: Beverly BUCHANAN, Elizabeth CATLETT, Sonya CLARK, Renee COX, Njideka AKUNYILI CROSBY, Karon DAVIS, Minnie EVANS, Nona FAUSTINE, LaToya Ruby FRAZIER, Ellen GALLAGHER, Leslie HEWITT, Clementine HUNTER, Steffani JEMISON, Jennie C. JONES, Simone LEIGH, Julie MEHRETU, Sister Gertrude MORGAN, Senga NENGUDI, Lorraine O'GRADY, Sondra PERRY, Howardena PINDELL, Faith RINGGOLD, Betye SAAR, Joyce J. SCOTT, Emmer SEWELL, Ntozake SHANGE, Xaviera SIMMONS, Lorna SIMPSON, Shinique SMITH, Renee STOUT, Mickalene THOMAS, Alma Woodsey THOMAS, Rosie Lee TOMPKINS, Kara WALKER, Meta Vaux Warrick FULLER, Carrie Mae WEEMS and Brenna YOUNGBLOOD - with selected works from The Ralph DeLuca Collection of African American Vernacular Photography
For more information please go to:
https://spruethmagers.com/exhibitions/power-group-exhibition-los-angeles/
GALLERY ONE - Karon DAVIS (detail)
GALLERY ONE - [wall] Renee COX, [floor] Karon DAVIS
GALLERY ONE left to right - [wall] Renee COX, [floor] Karon DAVIS, [wall] Renee STOUT, Steffani JEMISON, [floor] Brenna YOUNGBLOOD, [wall] Carrie Mae WEEMS (3), Kara WALKER
GALLERY ONE - [wall] Lorraine O’GRADY, [floor] Karon DAVIS
GALLERY ONE left to right - [wall] Lorraine O’GRADY, [floor] Karon DAVIS, [wall] Ellen GALLAGHER
GALLERY ONE left to right - [wall] Ellen GALLAGHER, Senga NENGUDI, [floor] Emmer SEWELL (2), [wall] Mickalene THOMAS, [floor] Karon DAVIS, [wall] Renee COX
GALLERY ONE left to right - [wall] Sonya CLARK, Njideka AKUNYILI CROSBY, Faith RINGGOLD, LaToya Ruby FRAZIER, [plinth] Elizabeth CATLETT, [wall] Nona FAUSTINE, Xaviera SIMMONS, [floor] Betye SAAR, Brenna YOUNGBLOOD, [wall] Renee STOUT, Steffani JEMISON, Carrie Mae WEEMS (3)
GALLERY ONE left to right - [wall] Sonya CLARK, Njideka AKUNYILI CROSBY, Faith RINGGOLD, LaToya Ruby FRAZIER, [plinth] Elizabeth CATLETT, [wall] Nona FAUSTINE
GALLERY ONE left to right - [wall] LaToya Ruby FRAZIER, [plinth] Elizabeth CATLETT, [wall] Nona FAUSTINE, [floor] Betye SAAR, [wall] Xaviera SIMMONS
GALLERY ONE left to right - [floor] Betye SAAR, [wall] Renee STOUT, Steffani JEMISON
GALLERY ONE - Carrie Mae WEEMS (3)
GALLERY ONE left to right - [wall] Carrie Mae WEEMS, [plinth] Simone LEIGH, [floor] Emmer SEWELL (2), [wall] Elizabeth CATLETT, Nona FAUSTINE, [plinth] Meta Vaux Warrick FULLER, [wall] LaToya Ruby FRAZIER, Xaviera SIMMONS
GALLERY ONE left to right - [wall] Senga NENGUDI, [plinth] Simone LEIGH, [wall] Mickalene THOMAS
GALLERY ONE - Carrie Mae WEEMS
GALLERY ONE left to right - Elizabeth CATLETT, Nona FAUSTINE
GALLERY ONE left to right - [plinth] Meta Vaux Warrick FULLER, [wall] LaToya Ruby FRAZIER, Xaviera SIMMONS
GALLERY ONE - Kara WALKER
GALLERY ONE - Lorna SIMPSON
GALLERY TWO left to right - [wall] Sondra PERRY, Beverly BUCHANAN, [hanging] Sonya CLARK, [plinth] Meta Vaux Warrick FULLER, [wall] Rosie Lee TOMPKINS, [floor] Shinique SMITH
GALLERY TWO left to right - [wall] Howardena PINDELL, [plinth] Meta Vaux Warrick FULLER, [hanging] Shinique SMITH, [wall] Renee STOUT
GALLERY TWO left to right - [wall] Renee STOUT, Brenna YOUNGBLOOD, [hanging] Shinique SMITH, [wall] Alma Woodsey THOMAS, [plinth] Beverly BUCHANAN, [floor] Leslie HEWITT
GALLERY TWO left to right - [floor] Leslie HEWITT, [plinth] Beverly BUCHANAN, [hanging] Shinique SMITH, [wall] Jennie C. JONES, Rosie Lee TOMPKINS, Julie MEHRETU, Jennie C. JONES
GALLERY TWO left to right - [wall] Renee STOUT, [plinth] Beverly BUCHANAN, [wall] Brenna YOUNGBLOOD, Howardena PINDELL, Alma Woodsey THOMAS
GALLERY TWO left to right - [floor] Leslie HEWITT, [plinth] Beverly BUCHANAN, [wall] Jennie C. JONES, Rosie Lee TOMPKINS
GALLERY TWO left to right - [wall] Faith RINGGOLD, Ellen GALLAGHER, [hanging] Betye SAAR, [floor] Simone LEIGH, [hanging] Sonya CLARK, [wall] Sister Gertrude MORGAN (5), Clementine HUNTER (3), Minnie EVANS (2), [plinth] Joyce J. SCOTT, [wall] Beverly BUCHANAN
GALLERY TWO left to right - [hanging] Betye SAAR, [floor] Simone LEIGH, [wall] Sister Gertrude MORGAN (5), Clementine HUNTER (3)
GALLERY TWO left to right - [wall] Sister Gertrude MORGAN (5), Clementine HUNTER (3), [wall] Minnie EVANS (2), [plinth] Joyce J. SCOTT, [wall] Beverly BUCHANAN, [floor] Simone LEIGH, [wall] Rosie Lee TOMPKINS, [hanging] Sonya CLARK
GALLERY TWO left to right - Faith RINGGOLD, Ellen GALLAGHER
GALLERY THREE - [wall] African American Vernacular Photography, [vitrine] Ntozake SHANGE, Sister Gertrude MORGAN
GALLERY THREE - [wall] African American Vernacular Photography, [vitrine] Ntozake SHANGE, Sister Gertrude MORGAN
GALLERY THREE - [wall] African American Vernacular Photography, [vitrine] Ntozake SHANGE, Sister Gertrude MORGAN
GALLERY THREE - [vitrine] Ntozake SHANGE, Sister Gertrude MORGAN
GALLERY THREE - Lorna SIMPSON
Curatorial statement:
Titled after the 1970 gospel song by Sister Gertrude Morgan, POWER begins with Artists born soon after the Civil War and continues to the present, weaving together fine and folk art traditions to explore how Artists engage issues of race, gender, and class against our evolving cultural and Artistic landscape. The 37 Artists in POWER draw into focus their struggle to establish themselves as equal players on the uneven field of the American republic.
The exhibition traces two Artistic threads that entwined to produce groundbreaking and evocative works across a range of mediums, which continue to influence Artistic dialogue today. The first approach, rooted in American history from the seventeenth through the nineteenth centuries, grew out of the horrific repression of slavery, when little formal education was available to black people living in the United States. Americans of African descent - and particularly black women - managed to preserve the culture of their ancestry, often at their own peril, by passing their histories down through craft-based folk traditions.
In the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, as access to Art academies broadened, a growing number of black women Artists emerged in the wake of the Reconstruction Era, including Meta Vaux Warrick Fuller, Alma Woodsey Thomas, and Elizabeth Catlett. With formal study in the traditional atelier model still dominated by white male Artists, they produced works that inventively reflected and adapted the modernist Art historical developments of the time.
These two paths of self-taught forebears and a newer academically trained generation collided at the dawn of the Harlem Renaissance in the 1920s. During this period, African American women began to "dream in color" - to envision a world in which their view of the human condition would be included in Artistic dialogues, and within the greater American experience. Still, except for few exceptions, the work of black women remained far more neglected and forgotten than even their black male colleagues.
It was not until the momentous strides of the Civil Rights and Women's Movements of the 1960s and 1970s that new openings arose for more voices to join and shift contemporary artistic dialogues. Artists such as Betye Saar, Faith Ringgold, and Lorraine O'Grady produced unforgettable images of resistance and community that incorporated both modernist tropes and the continued importance of vernacular Artistic traditions. They gradually received increased attention from Arts institutions, paving the way for the following generation to break further ground in the fields of photography, sculpture, and performance. Works by Senga Nengudi, Carrie Mae Weems, and Beverly Buchanan, for example, demonstrate the varied mediums and approaches that emerged in the 1970s and 1980s.
In the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries, the rich and extremely varied body of work created by African American women Artists continues to blend folk traditions with contemporary artistic theories and practices. Across all mediums, including painting, sculpture, photography, and video, Artists such as Ellen Gallagher, Kara Walker, Mickalene Thomas, Njideka Akunyili Crosby, and Nona Faustine break new ground, activate age-old traditions, incorporate new technologies, and look resolutely towards the future.
POWER also includes an installation of over one hundred African American vernacular photographs from the early twentieth century on loan from the Ralph DeLuca Collection. They offer a diverse view into everyday lives of African American women, from images of positive change to difficult scenes of negative stereotyping and violence. Offered as an exhibition-within-an-exhibition, these images from a century ago encourage reflection upon the continued struggles of black lives in America today.
The exhibition will be accompanied by a publication with a specially commissioned essay by the critic and scholar Andrianna Campbell.
Press
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