Tickets
Tuesday to Sunday
11 AM - 5 PM
Contrast

How to See a Work of Art in Total Darkness

How to See a Work of Art in Total Darkness

English, D

English, D

Walker, Kara
Wilson, Fred
Julien, Isaac
Ligon , Glenn
Pope.L, William
en
2010
Boek; (XII, 356 p.) ill
Met bio- en bibliografie
Located in: RACISME
VUBIS: 2:100760

Description

Work by black artists today is almost uniformly understood in terms of its "blackness," with audiences often expecting or requiring it to "represent" the race. In the publicatie English shows how severely such expectations limit the scope of our knowledge about this work and how different it looks when approached on its own terms. Refusing to grant racial blackness - his metaphorical "total darkness" - primacy over his subjects' other concerns and contexts, he brings to light problems and possibilities that arise when questions of artistic priority and freedom come into contact, or even conflict, with those of cultural obligation. English examines the integrative and interdisciplinary strategies of five contemporary artists stressing the ways in which this work at once reflects and alters our view of its informing context: the advent of postmodernity in late twentieth-century American art and culture.The necessity for "black art" comes both from antiblack racism and resistances to it, from both segregation and efforts to imagine an autonomous domain of black culture. Yet to judge by the work of many contemporary practitioners, English writes, black art is increasingly less able - and black artists less willing - to maintain its standing as a realm apart. Through close examinations of Walker's controversial silhouettes' insubordinate reply to pictorial tradition, Wilson's and Julien's distinct approaches to institutional critique, Ligon's text paintings' struggle with modernisms, and Pope.L's vexing performance interventions, English grounds his contention that to understand this work is to displace race from its central location in our interpretation and to grant right of way to the work's historical, cultural, and aesthetic specificity. - Coll. VAM: Kensmil, Iris, Studie in Zwarte Moderniteit, 2015-2017, inv. 3409