DUST JACKETS FOR THE NIGGERATI- AND SUPPORTING DISSERTATIONS,
DRAWINGS SUBMITTED RUEFULLY BY DR. KARA E. WALKER
Opening Reception: Thursday, April 21st 6-8PM
Sikkema Jenkins & Co. and Lehmann Maupin Gallery are
pleased to present joint exhibitions of new works by Kara Walker
on view at both galleries from April 21 through June 4, 2011.
The exhibition at Sikkema Jenkins & Co., Dust Jackets for the
Niggerati- and Supporting Dissertations, Drawings submitted
ruefully by Dr. Kara E. Walker, will feature new graphite drawings
and hand-printed texts on paper. This body of work grew out of the
artist’s search for understanding of the way that power asserts
itself in interpersonal and geopolitical spheres. As she embarked on
this quest the figural elements began to disappear from her work.
Now, they emerge again in what Walker describes as a “giddy
embrace” of the figural and the narrative.
The works explore themes of transition and migration that run
throughout the African American experience in the 20th century.
There is a cycle of destruction and renewal that is embodied in the
move from country to city, as well as the destruction of an “old”
Black identity and the emergence of a “New Negro” identity.
Thinking metaphorically about this move from rural to urban
environment, the works can be read almost as a comic book or
storyboard. There is a narrative present - both explicit and implied –
about the constant fluctuation of identity.
In the concurrent exhibition, Fall Frum Grace, Miss Pipi’s Blue Tale,
Lehmann Maupin Gallery at 201 Chrystie Street will present
three new video works which draw on Walker’s own experience in
the Mississippi Delta, “a region mythologized in song and popular
culture but tragically depressing.” She explains, “I drove down to
the Delta thinking about the terrors of Jim Crow and slavery, yet the
silent indifference of the landscape and the economic stasis, lack of
mobility, and the persistence of a racist memory in the area was
what stuck.”
The title video, Fall Frum Grace, Miss Pipi’s Blue Tale, is a shadow
puppet narrative which follows the travails of the heroine, Miss Pipi,
intercut with “abstracts” of a surreal and violent nature. The subtext
of the video is the mythology surrounding white Southern
womanhood, historically cited time and time again as an entity to
be protected from sexuality, in particular from the presumed hypersexuality
of black men. Although fiction, this was the excuse for the
murder of countless black men and boys in Jim Crow America.
Miss Pipi’s Blue Tale is meant to be as deeply contradictory a
visual tale as the Blues is in music. Delta Blues, often merges broad
comedy with despair, sensuality with loss and do-it-yourself
urgency with structured improvisation.
The exhibition’s musical theme is revisited in the short video loop,
Bad Blues. Featuring the artist and shot while traveling in
Mississippi, the video is a comic sketch about black female agency
and having “The Blues”. Another video, titled Levee, is a quiet
meditation on the landscape set at sunrise in Friars Point,
Mississippi. The straight line that bisects the image is the top edge
of a section of levee, shot from below, at the edge of the
Mississippi River. It is a black space, a barrier and engineering feat
that receives little attention until failures occur such as the 1927
levee break at Greenville, Mississippi or more recently those
caused by Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
Kara Walker was born in 1969 in Stockton, California and currently
lives and works in New York. Walker is known for her candid
investigation of race, gender, sexuality, and violence through
silhouetted figures, which have appeared in numerous exhibitions
worldwide. The artist’s recent solo exhibitions include The Black
Road at CAC Malaga, Spain; Kara Walker at the Met: After the
Deluge at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; and Kara
Walker: My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love,
which premiered at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis and
traveled to the Whitney Museum and the Hammer Museum in Los
Angeles. Walker is the recipient of numerous grants and fellowships
such as the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation
Achievement Award, the Deutsche Bank Prize, and the Larry
Aldrich Award.
Works by Walker can be found in prestigious collections around the
globe including the Art Institute of Chicago; the Baltimore Museum
of Art; the Whitney Museum of American Art; Brooklyn Museum of
Art, the Corcoran Gallery of Art, Washington D.C.; the Guggenheim
Museum, New York; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, New
York; the Tate Gallery, London; and the Rubell Family Collection,
Miami.
www.sikkemajenkinsco.com