From June 9 through July 15, Sikkema Jenkins & Co. will
present a solo exhibition of work by Larry Walker.
Curated by his daughter and gallery artist, Kara Walker,
the exhibition surveys nearly 50 years of Mr. Walker’s
artistic production. The exhibition features several dozen
works on paper in a range of mediums and styles dating
back to 1967 as well as mixed media paintings from the
past decade.
Reflecting the social upheavals that began in the late
1960s, Walker's Children of Society series, which
constitute the earliest works in the exhibition, attempts to
negotiate the will of the body against graphic constraints
like weights, walls, and limited horizons, representative of
an oppressive social order. This marrying of figures with
graphic symbols and landscape is a recurrent theme in
Walker’s work, as is particularly evident in his
Metamorphic and Saguaro Sprits series, which can be
seen as questioning our response to nature as well our
relationship to each other. Urban blight and human
resistance is considered in Walker’s Wall Series. Including
both collaged works on paper and canvas, the series
incorporates newspaper and advertising images that are
torn and painted over.
Organizing the exhibition was a deeply personal
experience for Kara Walker resulting in a more nuanced
understanding and appreciation for her father and their
relationship as both family and fellow artists: “Organizing
this exhibition is part curatorial inquiry, part familial legacy.
As a daughter I am pressed to uncover clues to my
father’s hidden self, as it has long been apparent to me
that his work offers insight into his humanity. The
drawings - figurative and abstract, landscape and
“innerscape” - are the background hum of my life from
infancy on. However as an artist I seem to be at cross
purposes, on one hand exposing Larry Walker’s work to
a wider public and critical inquiry while negotiating the
departures and liberties I have taken in my own work on
the other.”
A Georgia native, born in 1935 as the youngest of eleven
children, Larry Walker traces his trajectory across the
United States. Following his father’s death in 1936 and
the onslaught of the Depression, his family members
began to migrate to new locations in search of a better
life. Walker was raised in Harlem, New York where his
interest in art flourished. After graduating from the High
School of Music & Art (now Fiorello H. LaGuardia School
of the Arts), Walker relocated to Detroit for college,
receiving both his B.S. in Art Education and M.A. in
Drawing and Painting from Wayne State University.
In 1964 Walker began his long career as an educator at
the University of the Pacific in Stockton, California where
he was a professor and later chair of the Department of
Art. In 1983 he accepted a position in Atlanta as a
professor and director of the art program at Georgia
State University. He retired from the University in 2000
and currently lives outside Atlanta with his wife
Gwendolyn. He continues to make art in his home-studio
and is represented in Atlanta by Mason Fine Art Gallery.
Walker has an extensive exhibition history. He has been
the subject of over 40 solo exhibitions and has
participated in over 200 group exhibitions since 1971. His
work is in the collection of the High Museum in Atlanta,
Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Philadelphia
Museum of Art, The Museum of Contemporary Art of
Georgia and The Studio Museum in Harlem, among
others.