Title
Body Is the Ground of My Experience
black-and-white photomontages, varied sizes, 1991
BodyGround, shorthand for Body Is the Ground of My Experience, refers to the photomontages produced by O’Grady for her first one-person exhibit, at INTAR Gallery, NYC, Jan 21–Feb 22, 1991. The phrase doesn’t name a series — the works were unrelated — but rather the concern shaping O’Grady’s writing, thinking, and art-making at the time. The photomontages reprised several ideas from Rivers, First Draft in still form. Her move from performance to the wall had financial, personal, and theoretical motives. The work was growing both more direct and more complex and needed repeated viewings.
During her absence from the art world, O’Grady had become concerned about postmodernism’s over-simplifications which she felt re-located subjectivity away from the body to history in a way conveniently serving those in power. For while the body undoubtedly received history’s effects and was shaped by them, it was also, in an excess, the location of resistance. To make the point, her new photomontages — made the old-fashioned way just before Photoshop — eschewed both her earlier work’s layered beauty and postmodern photography’s dry formalism. Instead, they employed a psychological literalness reminiscent of Surrealism. In the Gaze and Dream quadriptychs, the bodies schematically enact both subjectivity’s stunting by history and latent resistance to it. And a group of three images, including The Strange Taxi and The Fir-Palm, employ a black body as a literal ground on which history acts but is unexpectedly modified.
O’Grady had not anticipated the intensely negative response, especially from white male viewers, to The Clearing, a diptych showing black and white bodies in what director John Waters calls “the last taboo.” One white male Harvard professor told her it was difficult to look at because it showed “how erotic domination is.” During this period, O’Grady experienced more success, especially with female audiences, via writings such as “Olympia’s Maid” and the articles in Artforum.
Artist as Art Critic: An Interview with Conceptualist Lorraine O’Grady, by Theo Davis
© Sojourner: The Women’s Forum
Conducted in Cambridge during O’Grady’s one-year residency at the
Bunting Institute at Harvard, the interview may have been affected by
what she’d felt as adverse treatment there of her diptych The Clearing.
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. . . . And you were fed up with that?
. . . . One of the things about my work that is most difficult for
people to warm to is that it always contains a critique of other work.
It is art criticism as well as art. And since it is frequently
critiqueing not just white institutions but Black art, that means I
have a hard time in my career.
Any examples?
The Bunting Institute had a show called A Range of Views: Four Bunting Artists. I put in a [diptych] from 1991 called The Clearing
[showing a white male and a black female in two different aspects of
their love-making. In one panel,] the male figure is wearing chain mail
because I feel that this relationship is the death of courtly love. I
used to call it just The Clearing, but [after the show I realized I had to clarify the title, make it even more in-your-face, so] now it’s called The Clearing: or Cortez and La Malinche, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, N. and Me.
What interested you in courtly love, which defines “desirable” women as “ladylike,” weak, and defenseless?
It’s not that I’m interested in courtly love! But the last vestige
of courtly love was “the cult of true womanhood”—[which was] the
reigning theory of femininity for the nineteenth century. [In other
words, it] was the cult of sexuality—of equating “desirable” and
“feminine” women to weakness—reigning during the time of slavery. And
the Black woman, because she was strong and because she worked, could
never be considered a “true woman.” Black women also could not be
considered true women because they survived their rapes; a “real woman”
would have committed suicide. At any rate, I put that work in the show,
and people at the opening basically shied away from me. Nobody would
comment on it.
Were they disturbed and didn’t know what to say?
That was certainly part of it. I did find that several people told
me that they were disturbed by the images. The other people were able
to place their disturbance with the content under the rubric of
disturbance with the form, because it was employing a Surrealist
vocabulary which for some people feels very dated. . . but this piece
is also a critique of Surrealism [which romanticized sexuality]. Also,
this work names the white male, which is very difficult. Feminist work
of the ‘70s didn’t name the white male. I would say that the difficulty
that Blacks and women have with this work is that it is naming the
white male and it is exposing and making so vulnerable the Black female
body.
The history of the success of Miscegenated Family Album
is interesting because it doesn’t deal with the physical act that
created these people, it just deals with results, and it’s very much
easier to take. What I’m trying to say in that piece is that this
American family genetically was formed in the same way that this
ancient Egyptian family was formed and that this is something the world
will need to think about....
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BodyGround Image Descriptions
© Lorraine O'Grady, 2010
Written to answer FAQs about the works without prescribing viewers' responses. The photomontages were not based in Surrealist or Dada randomness. To make arguments and not just images or dreams, rational sources were twisted so unfamiliar subjective material of the "other" might enter.
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“Body Is the Ground of My Experience”
black-and-white photomontages, varied sizes, 1991
DIPTYCHS:
THE CLEARING: OR, CORTEZ AND LA MALINCHE, THOMAS JEFFERSON AND SALLY HEMINGS, N. AND ME.
The diptych presents the both/and extremes of ecstasy and exploitation of this troubled and still under-theorized historic relationship. In the left panel, a naked couple deliriously “floats on air” above the trees while in the clearing below two mixed-race children play near a forgotten pile of clothing where a gun rests, threatening the scene. In the right panel, the skull-headed male figure proprietarily grasps the passive female’s breast. He wears tattered chain mail as if to argue that this foundational relationship of the Western Hemisphere, and its attendant duplicities, were the death of medieval “courtly love.”
DRACULA AND THE ARTIST. Left Panel: DREAMING DRACULA.
Right Panel: DRACULA VANQUISHED BY ART.
The image in the left panel, “Dreaming Dracula,” shows a black woman with broken, unkempt hair, dressed in a loose white shift. Her attention is focused on the flight of broken-toothed combs descending toward her on a shaft of light. To the right, in the panel “Dracula Vanquished by Art,” the same woman sits at a small wood table writing on a pad. Though there is a desk lamp, the illumination seems to come from the table itself, and her hair, still broken but now more “intentional,” is haloed by its light. The flight of combs lies spent in a corner of the room.
THE FIR-PALM
The foliage of a New England fir tree grows from a tropical palm trunk that in turn springs from an African woman’s navel. Before becoming a photomontage, this botanical conceit for the artist’s cultural background was originally a prop in the 1982 performance Rivers, First Draft.
THE STRANGE TAXI: FROM AFRICA TO JAMAICA TO BOSTON IN 200 YEARS
The artist’s mother Lena (second from left) and her maternal and paternal aunts have been montaged from photos dating from 1915-25, the great period of West Indian migration to the United States. They are sprouting from a New England mansion of the type they had to work in as ladies’ maids when they first arrived. The mansion-on-wheels rolls down the African woman’s back.
LILITH SENDS OUT THE DESTROYERS
Destroyer-class warships spray out from the African woman’s
crotch, but some return to wound the woman herself. Lilith, the African model for BodyGround, coincidentally shared the name of Adam’s first wife who, having been created at the same time and from the same clay as Adam, felt herself his equal. Lilith refused to submit to Adam, instead left Eden and was replaced by Eve. She then gave birth to 100 babies a day by countless lovers of her choice, causing trouble in the world.
GAZE and DREAM
Models from the arts were elements of an idealized portrait of reality and potential.
In GAZE they were asked, for the outer figure, to express a combination of anger and contempt—the kind of look they might have if they thought someone were stupid, but couldn’t say so; and for the inner figure, quiet pleasure, as if a secret thought had made them smile to themselves.
Those in DREAM were asked to pretend, for the outer, that they were having a light and amusing dream; and for the inner, to imagine themselves submerged in deep spiritual trance.
GAZE info: Gaze 1 was a sculptor and performance artist; Gaze 2, a jazz band leader; Gaze 3, a choreographer; and Gaze 4, a classical music composer.
DREAM info: Dream 1 was an art historian; Dream 2, a painter and installation artist; Dream 3, a costume conservator; and Dream 4, a sculptor.
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Lorraine O’Grady’s Natures
Andil Gosine & Lorraine O’Grady in conversation, 2010
This half-hour show, extracted from a longer video interview and produced in Canada for NCRA, focuses on O’Grady’s diptych “The Clearing” and explores issues of sex, nature and love in her work via a mix of the intellectual and the intimate.
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RADIO TRANSCRIPT
. . . .
(Opening music, “Uncomfortable Truth,” by Nneka”)
Gosine:. . . . Another of O’Grady’s beautiful works will re-emerge this fall at Beyond/In Western New York, an international exhibit taking place at various galleries across Buffalo from September 24 to the end of 2010. The now 75 year-old artist’s featured contribution will be “The Clearing,” a large black and white photographic diptych that she completed in 1990. The left panel presented a naked couple—a black woman and a white man in passionate embrace, floating in the sky, hovering above the trees. On the ground below, a young boy and girl are pictured running after a ball as it rolls towards a pile of the adults’ discarded clothing. A handgun is flung amongst the assortment of clothes. In the right panel, set in the same landscape, the male figure is clothed in chain mail, and a skull replaces his face. He is leaning over the black woman’s naked, numb body and fondles her breast. Her face is turned away, her arms stiff at her sides, her eyes fixed on the sky above. . . .
O’Grady: The Clearing has had a very interesting history, and. . . When I first showed it, at the INTAR show, which was the show that I made it for, that was a space that I controlled totally, this was MY show and this was all my work on the walls, and it occupied its place within that show which I have since come to call BodyGround, but it had many more elements than just BodyGround, so I didn't really think of it as that controversial, you know, I just thought, it's a wonderful piece and I like it, and it looks good on the wall, and it works well with these other pieces.
But the images created quite a stir. At some gallery spaces, curators often refused to show both panels of the piece.
I was invited to be in a show, a group show that was at, actually at David Zwirner, when he was still in Soho, and it was still an up-and-coming gallery, not the big blue-chip powerhouse that it is now, and a young woman from WAC was curating a show there. And it was about sex. . I can't remember quite the name of the show now. . . . I didn't realize it, but the hidden agenda of the show was to express in visual art this moment of sexual exuberance on the part particularly of white women. OK, this was the moment when white women were like really exploring and dynamically reinventing themselves sexually. . . . the curator asked me to give her a piece, and the only piece that I had that was remotely sexually explicit was this piece. So I gave her the diptych. But when I went to the show only the LEFT side of the diptych was present. Because this show was about, you know, sexuality as an uncomplicated, positive blessing. Not sexuality as a complicated life issue or even sexuality as an issue far more complicated for women of color than for white women, none of the modulations of sexuality were to be present in the show. And I said [laughs] what have you done, you've put my piece up and it's not my piece. That was when I first began to realize that the two parts of The Clearing might be a bit much for a certain audience.
The Clearing proved to be “too much” for a whole lot of people.
The Southeastern Center for Contemporary Art (SECCA) was doing a show, not about sexuality, but about black women, and I offered The Clearing. SECCA is in Winston Salem. North Carolina, and the curator was a very nice guy but he was from the South, and when he saw the piece. . . it just threw him. And he said, "That's not what sexuality is, or at least that's not what it's supposed to be." But well, that's what it is.
Even after O’Grady was invited to a take up a prestigious Fellowship to Harvard, she still encountered censorship of the work there, including discussion of it.
I put this piece in the show with three other artists who were Fellows, and I looked anxiously for the Radcliffe Quarterly's review and discussion of the show. . . and everybody else's piece was discussed, and everybody else's piece was shown -- except mine! Hmmm, well something's wrong here, right. I got so upset and people sort of were surprised that I got so upset and so some. . . it went to the Harvard Magazine and an editor there said, Oh, what's going on? and came over and talked to me, and I showed him and talked about the piece. He became very interested in it and wanted to write about it. And then when he proposed writing about it to his editor. . . he was the Managing Editor, I think, or the Assistant Editor, and he proposed writing about it to the Editor-in-Chief. . . and the Editor-in-Chief just said, "No." And the only answer was, "We only have so much capital (goodwill), and I don't intend to use any of it for this piece." So it never got shown, I mean it was shown, but it never got discussed at Harvard, in any way.
O’Grady, it seemed, was airing thoughts that were not supposed to be spoken.
I don't think most people want to think about the compromising, difficult parts of sexuality even among normally married couples, you know. But they certainly don't want to hear about that difficulty in interracial relationships, or certainly they don't want to have the historical nature of this relationship exposed en plein air.
The Clearing, O’Grady says, draws upon very common practices—but one that many people still feel very uncomfortable about acknowledging.
It's very very very difficult for people to be living in the kind of intimacy that obtained on the Southern plantation without desire going in totally unexpected or unpredictable ways. I mean, how could you live day after day, year after year with a certain person and not eventually see him as a person, or not eventually at least see them as a sexual object. I'm not speaking, you know, about going down to relieve your tubes in the slave quarters, but I'm talking about just what the white woman was exposed to, which would be men. . . serving men, coachmen, men as whatever. . . Obviously there had to be some parallel relationship and in fact there was. But I didn't realize this until I was teaching in Washington and there was a man who was teaching in the same high school [Eastern High School]. . . I taught there for about six months and I befriended a man, a wonderful man, [Colston] Stewart, and he came from Lynchburg, Virginia. One day he said something to me about the three different school systems in Virginia. . . this was the 60s (actually1964-65) and I said, What are you talking about? And he said, Yeah, there were three different school systems where. . . where I was growing up in Lynchburg. . . . There was a school system for the whites. There was a school system for the blacks. And there was a school system for the free issues. And I said, "free issues? What are the free issues?" And he said, "They're the children of the white women. Because," he said, "the law in Virginia said that all children issuing. . . all children of white women issue free from the womb." So if you had a child issuing free from the womb which was not white, then something had to be done with them. I don't think anybody just murdered them, you know, they were free and they were being raised by white mothers, but they were segregated. And so there were whole towns in Virginia that became populated by free issues. . . . That was like a visible sign that was going on for decades, even centuries, that this desire not only existed but was acted on and ultimately couldn't be policed totally.
After The Clearing’s debut presentation, O’Grady retitled the diptych in subsequent shows, in an effort to draw attention to the specific historical events she was drawing upon.
There is so much unacknowledged in the history of the colonization of the western hemisphere. The reason that I later subtitled The Clearing¬ as Cortez and La Malinche, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, as well as N., you know, N period, meaning any Name, and Me, is because actually the Western Hemisphere was founded in this relationship. La Malinche was an Aztec princess, but not really a very. . . a minor princess and somehow she learned Spanish, and as a result Cortez was able to conquer Mexico and the southern part of the peninsula with her help. Her name La Malinche kind of embodies the word traitor because she’s been considered the traitor of the Western Hemisphere, although now she is being recuperated by Mexican feminists as you might imagine. But this relationship, which in their case ultimately led to several children and so on, was there before the slaves came to the United States, before ENGLAND came to the United States, so it was foundational.
We think of this kind of relationship as unique but it was emblematic really of the relationships that were occurring throughout the South, for example, and were unacknowledged as part of what was actually making America "America." So 500 years of history, yes, going all the way back to Cortez, but coming up through, 200 years later, Sally Hemings, and 200 years after that, Me, this is an absolute, continuous relationship that's never discussed. . . . and that's why I made the piece. The piece was an attempt to start a discussion.
O’Grady especially hoped that “The Clearing” would trigger a discussion of the social aspects of sexual relationships.
Of course, the sexual relationship may always already be. . . (laughs) I hate that phrase, you know "always already". . . imbricated in the social. But. . . when we're actually involved in the sexual act, we're not thinking socially, we're not feeling socially. We're feeling totally individually. But then we're called to account. Once the orgasm is finished, then we're called to account and things, life, get much more complicated. . . .
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Olympia's Maid: Reclaiming Black Female Subjectivity
© Lorraine O'Grady 1992, 1994
This first-ever article of cultural criticism on the black female body was to prove germinal and continues to be widely referenced in scholarly and other works. Occasionally controversial, it has been frequently anthologized, most recently in Amelia Jones, ed, The Feminism and Cultural Reader, Routledge.
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The female body in the West is not a unitary sign. Rather, like a coin, it has an obverse and a reverse: on the one side, it is white; on the other, non-white or, prototypically, black. The two bodies cannot be separated, nor can one body be understood in isolation from the other in the West's metaphoric construction of "woman." White is what woman is; not-white (and the stereotypes not-white gathers in) is what she had better not be. Even in an allegedly postmodern era, the not-white woman as well as the not-white man are symbolically and even theoretically excluded from sexual difference. Their function continues to be, by their chiaroscuro, to cast the difference of white men and white women into sharper relief.
A kaleidoscope of not-white females, Asian, Native American, Latina, and African, have played distinct parts in the West's theater of sexual hierarchy. But it is the African female who, by virtue of color and feature and the extreme metaphors of enslavement, is at the outermost reaches of "otherness." Thus she subsumes all the roles of the not-white body.
The smiling, bare-breasted African maid, pictured so often in Victorian travel books and National Geographic magazine, got something more than a change of climate and scenery when she came here.
Sylvia Arden Boone, in her book Radiance from the Waters (1986), on the physical and metaphysical aspects of Mende feminine beauty, says of contemporary Mende: "Mende girls go topless in the village and farmhouse. Even in urban areas, girls are bare-breasted in the house: schoolgirls take off their dresses when they come home, and boarding students are most comfortable around the dormitories wearing only a wrapped skirt."
What happened to the girl who was abducted from her village, then shipped here in chains? What happened to her descendents? Male-fantasy images on rap videos to the contrary, as a swimmer, in communal showers at public pools around the country, I have witnessed black girls and women of all classes showering and shampooing with their bathing suits on, while beside them their white sisters stand unabashedly stripped. Perhaps the progeny of that African maiden feel they must still protect themselves from the centuries-long assault that characterizes them, in the words of the New York Times ad placed by a group of African American women to protest the Clarence Thomas–Anita Hill hearings, as "immoral, insatiable, perverse; the initiators in all sexual contacts—abusive or otherwise."
Perhaps they have internalized and are cooperating with the West's construction of not-white women as not-to-be-seen. How could they/we not be affected by that lingering structure of invisibility, enacted in the myriad codicils of daily life and still enforced by the images of both popular and high culture? How not get the message of what Judith Wilson calls "the legions of black servants who loom in the shadows of European and European-American aristocratic portraiture," of whom Laura, the professional model that Edouard Manet used for Olympia's maid, is in an odd way only the most famous example? Forget "tonal contrast." We know what she is meant for: she is Jezebel and Mammy, prostitute and female eunuch, the two-in-one. When we're through with her inexhaustibly comforting breast, we can use her ceaselessly open cunt. And best of all, she is not a real person, only a robotic servant who is not permitted to make us feel guilty, to accuse us as does the slave in Toni Morrison's Beloved (1987). After she escapes from the room where she was imprisoned by a father and son, that outraged woman says: "You couldn't think up what them two done to me." Olympia's maid, like all the other "peripheral Negroes," is a robot conveniently made to disappear into the background drapery.
To repeat: castrata and whore, not madonna and whore. Laura's place is outside what can be conceived of as woman. She is the chaos that must be excised, and it is her excision that stabilizes the West's construct of the female body, for the "femininity" of the white female body is ensured by assigning the not-white to a chaos safely removed from sight. Thus only the white body remains as the object of a voyeuristic, fetishizing male gaze. The not-white body has been made opaque by a blank stare, misperceived in the nether regions of TV.
It comes as no surprise, then, that the imagery of white female artists, including that of the feminist avant-garde, should surround the not-white female body with its own brand of erasure. Much work has been done by black feminist cultural critics (Hazel Carby and bell hooks come immediately to mind) that examines two successive white women's movements, built on the successes of two black revolutions, which clearly shows white women's inability to surrender white skin privilege even to form basic alliances. But more than politics is at stake. A major structure o psychic definition would appear threatened were white women to acknowledge and embrace the sexuality of their not-white "others." How else explain the treatment by that women's movement icon, Judy Chicago's Dinner Party (1973-78) of Sojourner Truth, the lone black guest at the table? When thirty-six of thirty-nine places are set with versions of Chicago's famous "vagina" and recognizable slits have been given to such sex bombs as Queen Elizabeth I, Emily Dickinson, and Susan B. Anthony, what is one to think when Truth, the mother of four, receives the only plate inscribed with a face? Certainly Hortense Spillers is justified in stating that "the excision of the genitalia here is a symbolic castration. By effacing the genitals, Chicago not only abrogates the disturbing sexuality of her subject, but also hopes to suggest that her sexual being did not exist to be denied in the first place."
And yet Michele Wallace is right to say, even as she laments further instances of the disempowerment of not-white women in her essay on Privilege (1990), Yvonne Rainer's latest film, that the left-feminist avant-garde, "in foregrounding a political discourse on art and culture," has fostered a climate that makes it "hypothetically possible to publicly review and interrogate that very history of exclusion and racism."
What alternative is there really—in creating a world sensitive to difference, a world where margins can become centers—to a cooperative effort between white women and women and men of color? But cooperation is predicated on sensitivity to differences among ourselves. As Nancy Hartsock has said, "We need to dissolve the false 'we' into its true multiplicity." We must be willing to hear each other and to call each other by our "true-true name."
To name ourselves rather than be named we must first see ourselves. For some of us this will not be easy. So long unmirrored in our true selves, we may have forgotten how we look. Nevertheless, we can't theorize in a void, we must have evidence. And we—I speak only for black women here—have barely begun to articulate our life experience. The heroic recuperative effort by our fiction and nonfiction writers sometimes feel stuck at the moment before the Emancipation Proclamation. It is slow and it is painful. For at the end of every path we take, we find a body that is always already colonized. A body that has been raped, maimed, murdered—that is what we must give a healthy present....
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On being the presence that signals an absence
© Lorraine O'Grady 1993
Written for the unpublished, photocopied catalogue of
Coming to Power: 25 Years of Sexually X-plicit Art by Women, curated by Ellen Cantor and presented by David Zwirner Gallery and Simon Watson/The Contemporary, NYC, the essay examines O’Grady’s inclusion in the show and responses to her diptych The Clearing.
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"I don't like it," he says. "That's not the way sex is supposed to be."
He points at "Love in Black and White," the right panel of a photo-diptych I call
The Clearing.
But it is, I think. And it has been, often, for 500 years. I follow his finger and look at the white chevalier in tattered chainmail with a skull instead of a head. The knight's hand proprietarily grasps the breast of an almost jet-black nude woman whose eyes look out beyond the frame and reflect centuries of knowing blankness and boredom.
"It doesn't feel like that to
me," he says. This southern white curator is not going to take my diptych for his show. But his presence in my studio is proof of how far he and we have come.
Then he asks, "Are the two panels Before and After?"
He catches me off-guard, and my response is oddly diffident. Now I look at "Green Love," the left panel, the one he's said he likes. A nude white male and black female are floating on air, coupling ecstatically above the trees. Below them, on the grass, two mixed-raced children are playing tag while a gun, camouflaged on the lover's discarded clothes, silently threatens the scene.
"No," I say. "They're Both/And."
The curator gazes at me with an uncomprehending expression. Uncertainty is making me feel stupid. I know that when he leaves I will be able to construct an explanation. This is what I get for wanting images to take me someplace I cannot arrive with words. And yet the wordsmith in me wants to be defeated.
. . . .
When I am asked to be on a College Art Association panel on the nude, I accept. It scarcely bothers me that it will be another of those "fly in the buttermilk" situations. I am hoping that, in some way I can't yet foresee, my presence, my divergence from the panel's premises, will not just add to, but alter the debate's basic nature.
Another sign. I ask other artists and critics if they know of black women with bodies of work on the nude (I need more slides for my talk) and am taken aback. The only name I come up with is that of my friend Sandra Payne. Now I have to research in earnest.
As I work on "Olympia's Maid," my paper for the panel, I learn that during the two centuries of black fine art dating back to before 1960, the nude, Western art's favored category, was avoided even by male black artists, with Eldzier Cortor's Sea Island series of the 1940s a rule-proving exception. Since then, there have been individual pieces and a few series, but no oeuvres; and female black artists are vastly underrepresented. . .
In the '90s, I think, surely things have changed. When I learn that a young white woman artist named Ellen Cantor is curating a show called
Coming to Power: 25 Years of Sexually X-plicit Art by Women, I want to know if her research will have results different from mine.
"There isn't much fine art, but there is video and film, most of it by younger black lesbians," she says and adds more issues to my list of answer-questions. . . .
I have not learned anything to make me stop being concerned and curious about the status of the black female body. It seems as beleaguered today as it has ever been. After a recent remark in
Women's Wear Daily that haute couture shows had begun to look like 125th Street, the black woman has almost disappeared from the fashion runway. And on rap videos, the few girl rappers are still heavily outnumbered by the girls shaking their booties, who are abused equally by the gangsta lyrics and the camera.
I have been writing this [catalogue essay] before
Coming to Power opens. My diptych
The Clearing is down at the gallery, the only piece by a black fine artist, and I am nervous. How will it work, I wonder? It is hardly a "representative" piece: its oblique historic references are simply to one way sex can be. But I am hoping the show's context will stretch the definitions of nudity and sex in more than one direction, nudge them past the way sex is supposed to be.
At the opening, only "Green Love," the left panel with the nude white male and black female coupling above the trees, is on the wall. The right panel, "Love in Black and White," the one with the white male in tatty chainmail and the black female looking bored as her breast is grabbed, is returned to me. There just wasn't room for it with so many pieces in the show, Cantor explains. At least she doesn't say, "
That's not the way sex is supposed to be."
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Lorraine O'Grady. Interview by Laura Cottingham. Nov 5, 1995
© Hatch-Billops Collection, Inc. 1996
Laura Cottingham, 1995
In-depth interview done for the excellent
Artist and Influence series produced by Camille Billops and James Hatch for their archive of African American visual and theatre arts.
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This is my good friend Laura Cottingham. We've been having conversations like this for some time now.
. . . .
For me your recent work, like the "Miscegenated Family Album" as well as "The Clearing," deals directly with heterosexual relationships, which means black and white, especially between the black woman and the white man. Could you talk about that and how that subject and content comes to you and how you feel it's perceived?I don't know if it's been because of my own personal experience, because of the times in which I grew up, always finding myself the only black woman surrounded by a sea of white people and thus almost of necessity dating white men, but I have always understood racism not in economic terms, but in sexual terms. I don't think racism could have the kind of intensity it has if it were simply, as the Marxists say, "an economic problem." It is certainly an economic problem, precisely because it is a psychological problem, but the psychological precedes and makes the economic exploitation possible. Interracial sex, and the fear surrounding it, seems to me to be at the nexus of the country's social forces. Within the various permutations, of course, the black male/white female is the most symbolically potent. It represents the fear of the loss of power; it is a negative symbol, if you will, embodying the very structure of white fear.
The white male/black female (or the female of color all over the world) on the other hand, is a positive symbol, an expression of what the power is FOR, rather than a reaction to the potential loss of power. And since it is the expression of power, I feel that is nearer the crux of the situation. If you can examine that, bring it to light and make it objectively viewable, then you can perhaps create an interesting discussion. I'm not sure that you can change the world, but at some level I believe in the psychoanalytic theory which states that problems can be made manageable through the handling of images and words. The more familiar an image becomes, the more it can be discussed, and perhaps then the more it can be psychologically manipulated in a social context.
You have said before that you consider that particular context to be the most controversial in the images that you have produced so far. Do you still feel that?I read an interview in
Artforum with John Waters, who said, "Black and white is the last taboo, although nobody talks about it." I think that in fact it is. And although the white male/black female is more underground as a taboo than the black male/white female, its very hidden quality makes it the most difficult to come to grips with. All I know is that I have been having some real difficulty in getting people to focus on the imagery. A few months ago when I showed "The Clearing" at the Bunting Institute at Harvard, it made people uncomfortable. One white male professor of history confessed that he found it very difficult to look at. When I asked him why, he said because it talked about how erotic domination is.
For those not familiar with your work, could you please give a description of the content of that work?"The Clearing" is a diptych that I did for my INTAR show in 1991. On the left side, a white male and a black female nude are making love in the trees. The couple is very obviously happy. Below them on the ground you see a pile of discarded clothing and two mixed-race children running after a ball. On the pile of clothing is a gun silently threatening the scene. On the right side it's the same background, the same clearing of trees, only now the black woman is lying on the ground looking off into the distance with a very bored expression; the white male is now dressed in tattered chain mail, and his head has been replaced by a skull. His attitude is clearly proprietary, as he absentmindedly grasps her breast. I put him in chain mail because I felt that this relationship, and the duplicities it implied for white women, was the death of courtly love.
Something that seemed to bother people was that I changed the title in order to make it more explicit. In 1991 it was called simply "The Clearing," but now it is "The Clearing, or Cortez and La Malinche, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, N. and Me." So the piece has been historicized in that way. And it isn't a "before/after" piece; it's a "both/and" piece. This couple is on the wall in the simultaneous extremes of ecstasy and exploitation. I think the piece is saying something interesting and complex about relationships. Not just about this particular relationship, but about all sexual relationships.
What do I think about the subject matter? The subject matter of miscegenation and interracial sex? I certainly don't think it is an evil in itself or at all. But to the degree it is still a symbol of the "other's" exploitation culturally, sexually, and in every way, I think it's what we've got to come to grips with worldwide before we can move on. Every time I think that the subject matter is old-fashioned, I get brought up short by how contemporary it is. . . . .
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A Postmortem On Postmodernism?
Judith Wilson, 1992
Wilson’s slide lecture, delivered just prior to O’Grady’s publication of “Olympia’s Maid,” tellingly inflects T. Feucht-Haviar’s later discussion of subjectivity as a critical category needed to oppose regimes of knowledge acquisition and production based in compromised forms of power relations.
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Postmodernism has been especially problematic for artists of color, at the same time that it has gained them greater visibility than ever before. A few examples:
(SLIDE 1L, images and titles in slide list at end) Adrian Piper is one of the artists whom I have long considered a pioneer African-American post-modernist. Yet, Piper, a philosophy professor deeply enamoured of Kantian metaphysics, firmly rejects postmodernism's anti-rationalist philosophical premises.
(SLIDE 1R) Similarly, but for quite different reasons, Carrie Mae Weems has taken me to task for characterizing her work as "postmodern." To Weems, such labels smack of Eurocentrism.
(SLIDE 2L) With Lorna Simpson, we have yet another wrinkle--an African-American photographer whose work gained immediate acceptance as "postmodern" by mainstream critics and curators, while the race and gender-specificity of her images, though frequently praised, went largely unexamined--except by critics of color, such as Kellie Jones, Yasmin Ramirez and Coco Fusco.
To the extent that postmodernism has been a privileged discourse within the artworld for the past decade or so, these artists’ ambivalence toward and their ambiguous status with respect to that discourse can be seen as the simple consequence of a long history of denial, insult and exclusion. In the tendency of someone like Piper to reject a theoretical program that celebrates difference and radically critiques the interface of political and cultural power, I am reminded of the self-defeating rigidity and caution that the legal scholar Patricia J. Williams has described in
The Alchemy of Race and Rights. Contrasting her own behavior with that of a white colleague, Williams writes:
"Peter . . . appeared to be extremely self-conscious of his power potential . . . as white or
male or lawyer authority figure. He therefore seemed to go to some lengths to overcome the
wall that image might impose. The logical ways of establishing some measure of trust
between strangers were an avoidance of power and a preference for informal processes
generally.
On the other hand, I was raised to be acutely conscious of the likelihood that no matter what
degree of professional I am, people will greet and dismiss my black femaleness as unreliable,
untrustworthy, hostile, angry, powerless, irrational, and probably destitute.
On the other hand, I was raised to be acutely conscious of the likelihood that no matter what degree of professional I am, people will greet and dismiss my black femaleness as unreliable, untrustworthy, hostile, angry, powerless, irrational, and probably destitute."
As a result, Williams comes to understand that "one's sense of empowerment defines one's relation to the law, in terms of trust/ distrust, formality/informality, or rights/no-rights..."
When an artist like Carrie Mae Weems bridles at being labeled a postmodernist and insists on the exclusively non-European nature of her concerns, I am reminded of Williams's confession:
"I am afraid of being alien and suspect, of being thrown out at any moment; I am relieved when I am not. At the same time, I am enraged by the possibility of this subsurface drama-waiting-to-happen. . . . [A]t the same time I am embarrassed by all these feelings. . . . I can't kill and I can't teach everyone. I can't pretend it doesn't bother me; it eats me alive. So I protect myself. . . . I don't deal with other people if I can help it."
The situation of artists like Lorna Simpson, who gain mainstream recognition of only those aspects of their work that conform to dominant cultural values or experiences, calls to mind the words of another author I have recently been reading--Toni Morrison, who, in
Playing in the Dark, notes that:
"Like thousands of avid but nonacademic readers, some powerful literary critics in the United States have never read, and are proud to say so,
any African-American text."
Morrison is distressed by the existence of powerful and putatively well-informed white intellectuals who feel no regret about their ignorance of black literature. But I submit that the behavior of critics who publicly assess individual black authors or artists without bothering to acquaint themselves with the histories of cultural practice by African-Americans or other people of color demonstrate an equal degree of irresponsibility and contempt.
(SLIDES 2R & 3L) Thus, for example, a work like Lorraine O'Grady's 1991 diptych, Dracula and the Artist,--with its left panel subtitled "Dreaming Dracula" and its right subtitled "Dracula Vanquished by Art"--gains additional interpretative dimensions when it is compared not only with similar work by, say, Sandy Skoglund or other white (or, for that matter, black) contemporaries of the artist. It also seems worth considering how O'Grady's work operates in comparison with images by her African- American predecessors--(SLIDE 3R) like this untitled photograph by James Van Der Zee.
Both artists flaunt their disinterest in conventional photographic naturalism. Both create works that operate narratively--representing sequences of events organized according to principles of causality. Yet, Van Der Zee's use of painted backdrops and multiple exposures ultimately results in Pictorialist clichés. While, O'Grady--who neither shoots nor develops her photographic images, but functions like an art director with respect to advertising photos--achieves something far more strange, reminiscent of Surrealism, but less dream-like than cinematic. Such work challenges traditional photography's emphasis on craft, on one hand, and its illusions of transparency, on the other.
At the same time, though, O'Grady's work retains a cultural specificity that does not so much defeat meaning as force its reconfiguration. I suspect it is this aspect of photographic practice by artists of color that leads some viewers to conclude their work is not postmodern. For, how can subjects be de-centered and specific at the same time? Or, are members of groups who seek subject status necessarily engaged in some enterprise other than postmodernism?
In an essay entitled "Interrogating Identity," Homi Bhabha has written that the postcolonial condition is characterized by "repeated negations of identity" and "the impossibility of claiming an origin for the Self . . . within a tradition of representation" based on "stability of the ego, expressed in the equivalence between image and identity."
Put simply: European colonialism set off a chain of displacements. Shifts in the ways that Western Europeans conceived of the world and their location in it, as well as physical shifts of population, technology, and wealth, altered existing political, social and cultural configurations--not only in Europe, but in all of the territories Europeans colonized. In the Americas, an indigenous population was conquered and enslaved. When Native Americans proved inefficient as forced laborers, millions of Africans were imported as replacements. Thus, even in the colonial era, much of the Americas would seem to have been culturally hybrid. Yet, European political and economic dominance tended to overshadow such conditions. Thus, the non-European populations of most colonized areas lapsed into a kind of social and symbolic invisibility--or at least obscurity.
In the postcolonial era, former colonizers have not just lost or relinquished control of old colonial possessions. The colonizing nations themselves have been transformed by the influx of migrants from their former territories. Conceptual habits die hard, however, and thus members of previously dominant groups tend to ignore, discount or otherwise misread the character of those with whom they now share a plural culture. It is this conflict between ill-fitting externally imposed identities and a history of multiple origins that makes the Self a sort of Sisyphean stone for contemporary people of color. (SLIDES 4L & 4R). Yet, as the Jamaica-born black British sociologist Stuart Hall has noted, this destabilization of identity has become "the representative postmodern experience".
In contemporary art theory, dislocation--the ability to reside everywhere and nowhere at once--is frequently regarded as an intrinsic feature of photography. This conception of the medium, of course, stems from Walter Benjamin, who observed that, thanks to mechanical reproduction, "the cathedral leaves its locale to be received in the studio of a lover of art." Because of its attendant ability to undermine "the authority of the object," photography has become the medium of choice for many artists engaged in the postmodern project of dismantling the truth-claims of representation. (SLIDES 5L & 5R)
A high-stakes enterprise, for artists committed to social change this deconstruction of images ostensibly involves unhinging the lopsided power relations between those who traditionally view and those who are traditionally viewed, while simultaneously exposing the pretensions of representational illusionism. However, the British art critic John Roberts has noted the political insufficiency of postmodern strategies that claim to be radical solely on the basis of photography's ability to "initiate some kind of 'epistemological rupture' in the field of vision."
Roberts argues that "we might speak of issues around gender, race and sexuality as being central to the postmodernist problematic" because they replace dominant codes with repressed meanings, rather than descending into mere meaninglessness. (SLIDE 6L) . . . .
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A West Indian Yankee in Queen Nefertiti’s Court
by CALVIN REID. 1993
Article in New Observations #97: COLOR. September/October 1993, pp. 5-9. Special issue, edited by Adrian Piper.
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. . . . After 1988 [O’Grady’s] interests have shifted [from
performance] to creating fixed images within the gallery space. She has
spoken of her performances as a heightened form of writing, a form that
enables her to combine the linear narrative of the story with the
ability to simultaneously present successive layers of fact and symbol.
“Performance is the way I write most effectively,” she said in an
unpublished interview with Tony Whitfield in 1983, “Mlle Bourgeoise
Noire is actually a didactic essay written in space, while the form of Nefertiti/Devonia Evangeline approximates that of a book — a family photo album, interlaced with personal reminiscence and ritual.”
The new work, photomontages dating from 1990, was displayed
in 1991 at New York City’s INTAR Gallery. Despite her careful
documentation of [the earlier] performances she has expressed some
dismay at the transience aligned to physical performance — the
inability of her audiences to savor, contemplate and engage the issues
in a work that is suddenly here and just as quickly gone. These photo
works represent another effort to “write” in an unconventional mode and
the manipulation of composition and culturally charged imagery used to
spur an interpretive response informed by O’Grady’s pervasive sense of
cause, effect and social dilemma.
Once again O’Grady uses the pictorial works to inspect her
own life while dissecting that around her. In these works, using a
model and photographer for technical applications, O’Grady’s interest
focuses often on the Black female body, highlighting its general
absence from the contemporary visual discourse and arranging it in
compositions of striking visuality, relocating her critical vantage
point from real acts in real space to a postmodernist location as a
creator and manipulator of images capable of mass projection.
In the 1991 work, The Fir Palm, a tellingly
fictional “hybrid” stalk of vegetation — palm tree trunk topped with
the bristled branches of the Northern Fir tree — appears to spring from
the landscape of a close-up crop of the model’s loamy black body.
Planted exactly in the navel, this absurd combination of geographical
and arboreal opposites extends upwards towards a sky streaked with
clouds. O’Grady’s West Indian background, symbolized by the trunk of an
island palm tree, is visually married to an equally dear geographically
resonant emblem of Yankee New England. Strangely captivating and mildly
comic, the image manages to evoke the sublime contradictions that
contribute to the artist’s sense of identity as well as what she sees
as her cultural legacy as a Black artist and intellectual. Her
refreshingly unconventional symbolism unites the apparently
contradictory elements of her life and development. She presents her
life — middle-class Black female and an intellectual to boot — as
representative of a new wing to the African-American cultural diaspora;
as a bonafide extension of traditional representations of Black culture
as a southern American phenomena or as an urban extension of that
tradition. Her work opens black tradition to a broad range of Black
experience, chipping away at the tendency of Black folks as well as
White folks to narrow Black experience.
In Lilith Sends Out the Destroyers, a
kaleidoscopic stream of warships spouts upward and outward from the
pubic area of another close-in profile shot of the Black female body.
This image, rife with connotations of destructive progeny and latent
female power, contrasts with other works chronicling interracial
sexuality, death and domination, once again as strikingly enigmatic as
they are culturally interrogative.
In The Clearing, 1991, (the work is composed of
two individually titled and framed panels), she presents the
perennially startling image of interracial lovemaking within a visual
discourse on the nature of sexual relationships between Black women and
White men. The effect of this work is a complex parade of imagery
calculated in its attempt to visualize the female contemplation of
interracial coupling; its precedents, its contradictions and to some
extent its inevitability. In the panel on the left, subtitled Green Love,
hovering in the sky above a lush park setting, a white man settles
between the legs of his Black mate in an image of sexual partner and
tenderness; while below, in a clearing, children play, running around a
forgotten pile of clothing. The panel on the right, Love in Black and White,
presents a White man covered in medieval chain mail, seducing a Black
woman. A death’s head obscures the man’s features while his hand rests
on the naked, impassive woman beneath. The image captures an image of
white men, sheathed in social armor; protected and preying on a
relationship of unequal power with the inherent potential for blatant
sexual exploitation.
In Gaze 1,2,3,4, a series of portraits present two
images of the four individuals pictured, two Black men and women, their
torsos bare. A smaller image of each model, whose expressions are
responses to cues from the artist, is placed over (or seemingly
within) a larger image of the same individual. This simple but
effective image presents two faces to the world; the inner and outer
view, the physical and the metaphysical. The works attempt to locate
the existential core of their subjects, stripped of defenses,
presumptions and psychic bric-a-brac. The models stare directly at the
viewer, locking their photographically portrayed sensibilities into the
viewer’s.
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Biraciality and Nationhood in Contemporary American Art
by Kymberly N. Pinder. 2000
An article on work by artists responding to racial hybridity that features a discussion of O’Grady’s diptych, The Clearing. Published in Third Text: Critical Perspectives on Art and Culture 53, Winter 2000-01.
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For when we swallow Tiger Woods, the yellow-black-red-white man,
we swallow something much more significant than Jordan or Charles
Barkley. We swallow hope in the American experiment, in the pell-mell
jumbling of genes. We swallow the belief that the face of the future is
not necessarily a bitter or bewildered face, that it might even, one
day, be something like Tiger Wood’s face: handsome and smiling and
ready to kick all comers’ asses.
The hope in ‘the yellow-black-red-white man’, reflected in the
Tigermania that swept the US in the mid-1990s, is indicative of the
racial crossroads at which the US, as a nation, finds itself at the
close of the twentieth century. . . . Where are we as a nation
regarding race when Woods can consider himself ‘Cablinasian’ while some
southern states are still officially ending their ‘one-drop’ rules and
[taking] laws against mixed marriages off the books? How can we address
the concerns of those who see Affirmative Action as all but dead?
Some contemporary artists in the US have been struggling
with these issues during the 1980s and 1990s. Lorraine O’Grady is one
of them. She originally titled her photomontage diptych The Clearing in 1991, however, later, she lengthened the title to The Clearing: or Cortez and La Malinche, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, N and Me
to clarify the historical and personal relevance of the work. The left
half of the piece presents the relationship between the black woman and
white man as loving while the right as malevolent. The skeletal face of
the man and the gun in the pile of clothing provide elements of
violence and death. Yet O’Grady says, ‘it isn’t a “before/after” piece;
it’s a “both/and” piece. This couple is on the wall in the simultaneous
extremes of ecstasy and exploitation.’ The complex relationship between
exploitation and defiance for such ‘women of color’ as La Malinche and
Sally Hemings has become a trope of American hybridity and assimilation.
. . . .
[Figures] such as Malinche and Pocahontas have also gained political
significance as they are seen to offer hopeful moments of
cross-cultural co-operation in our racially divided pasts. For example,
the 1995 Disney film about the latter presents the saga as a love story
in which Pocahontas risks her own life to save that of John Smith. This
narrative, based upon Smith’s account and revised for a young audience,
excludes Matoaka’s (Pocahontas’s real name) later kidnapping an forced
conversion. Many applauded Disney’s politically correct inclusion of
Native American history into its repertoire, however, the effects of
the distortion of ‘Distory’ on our children’s understanding of national
history and race relations are questionable. The scale of this type of
nationalistic desire for harmony, past and present, through these
icons, is summed up in the words of Woods’s father, Earl:
Tiger will do more than any other man in history to change the
course of humanity. . . Because he’s qualified through his ethnicity
to accomplish miracles. He’s a bridge between East and West. There is
no limit because he has the guidance. . . He is the Chosen One. He’ll
have the power to impact nations. Not people. Nations.
O’Grady’s photomontage parallels the relationships of La Malinche
and Sally Hemings. La Malinche’s facility at languages made her
translator for the Spanish conqueror Hernan Cortez; then she gave birth
to a racial bridge, their son, the original mestizo. La Malinche’s
other name was La Lengua, the language, and the transformation from
’race traitor’, La Malinche is a slur in some Mexican dialects, to the
status of the great communicator an reconciler, as she has been
recently reclaimed, namely by feminists, is a leitmotif in the
biographies of such historical figures. No matter her intentions, La
Lengua brought together Europeans and Indians; Hemings united, inside
and outside of herself, Africans and Europeans; and Woods, the
‘yellow-red-black-white man’ brings together all of the ‘primary races’
in one body. As his mother Tida says, ‘Tiger has Thai, African,
Chinese, American Indian and European blood; he can hold everyone
together; he is the Universal Child.’....
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Black Female Spectatorship and the Dilemma of Tokenism
by Michele Wallace. 1994
An article in dialogue with O’Grady’s “Olympia’s Maid: Reclaiming Black Female Subjectivity.” In Generations: Academic Feminists in Dialogue, Devoney Looser and E. Ann Kaplan, eds. Minneapolis and London: University of Minnesota Press, 1997. pp 88-101.
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. . . . In this regard, I would like to pose a further question: what
if the black female subject is constructed much like the white female
subject? Or what if the similarities between the psychoanalytic
construction of the black female subject and that of the white female
subject are greater than the dissimilarities? Moreover, if you accept
the thesis that psychoanalytic film criticism proposes of a closed
Eurocentric circuit in Hollywood cinema in which a white male-dominated
“gaze” is on one end an the white female “image” is on the other end,
what happens to the so-called black female subject? Does she even
exist? And if she does, how does she come into existence?
Helpful to me in thinking about the problems suggested here
has been the writing of black female conceptual artist and theorist
Lorraine O’Grady in “Olympia’s Maid: Reclaiming Black Female
Subjectivity” and in her unpublished “Postscript,” and the writing of
black feminist art historian Judith Wilson in “Getting Down to Get
Over: Romare Bearden’s Use of Pornography and the Problem of the Black
Female Body in Afro-U.S. Art.” In looking at the status of the black
female nude in art history, which is handled very differently from the
white female nude, O’Grady insists that the only constant in
Euro-American theoretical analysis has been “the black body’s location
at the extreme,” whereas Wilson remarks on how black fine artists have
also avoided the black female nude because of its negative
associations, perhaps with the sexual exploitation of slavery.
O’Grady, who says her goal is to “deal with what Gayatri
Spivak has called the ‘winning back of the position of the questioning
subject’” is thus prompted to suggest that “the black female’s body
needed less to be rescued from the masculine gaze than it had to be
sprung from an historic script surrounding her with signification while
at the same time, and not paradoxically, erasing her completely.” While
I think that O’Grady is onto something here when she suggests that the
issue for black women is one of establishing subjectivity, I haven’t
always been able to see the notion of a black female subject as
separate from the notion of a white female subject. Would this mean,
after all, that there were Asian, Indian, and African female subjects
as well? Is subjectivity really divided by race, nationality,
ethnicity? I don’t think so. I’m not saying that subjectivity isn’t
divided. I think it probably is divided in some manner, but I’m not
sure that it can therefore be viewed as historically and materially
specific, and that it divides easily by ethnicity, nationality, or any
other constructed or natural rubric. Certainly, “spectatorship” as it
is constructed by the dominant discourse does not.
On the other hand, things like class allegiances and
identity, sexuality, and experience seem to make a profound difference
in how the female subject is constituted visually and how those images
circulate. Even more significant here is O’Grady’s suggestion that the
status of the white female “image,” or the objectification of the white
female body, is part of the circuit of subjectivity for women. In other
words, although the white male “gaze” (or the gaze of the dominant
culture) objectifies and, therefore, dehumanizes the white woman, in
fact, that objectification also implicitly verifies the crucial role
white women play in the process of or circuit of spectatorship. In
other words, the process of objectification also inadvertently
humanizes as well a built-in advantage that is then denied to women of
color in general, but to the despised (or desired) black woman in
particular.
So the problem of white female subjectivity is one of
reversing the terms somehow, or reversing the connection or the
hierarchy between male and female, whereas in the case of the black
female body, or the body of the other, the connection is to a third,
much less explored level in the hierarchy, the sphere of the abject,
which includes, as Sander Gilman and Michel Foucault have pointed out,
the pathological.
As such, reversal is no cure and cannot take place. Black
female subjectivity remains unimaginable in the realm of the symbolic.
O’Grady’s approach as an artist seems to be to attempt to upgrade the
status of the black female nude, or at least to get us to think about
how and why the black female nude is devalued. Can you imagine Louise
Beavers in a sexy dress in Imitation of Life? And yet Bessie Smith played just such a role in Saint Louis Blues, not to mention in life.
Lately, I have been working on my mother Faith Ringgold’s series of story quilts. The French Collection,
in which she illustrates the adventures of a protagonist named Willa
Marie, born in 1903, who goes to Paris to become an artist and who
alternates working as an artist’s model with her own painting (true of
many female artists). In the process, the subsequent images toy with
this circuit of subjectivity that O’Grady proposes as so crucial, for
Willa Marie is configures as both subject and object by the text and
the images.
In a multicultural context, the response of many is to
historicize the question of subjectivity (which I believe is crucial as
well) and, in the process, dispense with the synchronic explanations of
psychoanalytic complexity and abstraction. But, then, how do we account
for the play of the unconscious in black cultural production and in the
everyday lives of black people? The play of the unconscious roughly
refers to the highly ambivalent relation of plans to practice, and
stated intentions to unconscious motivations, in African American
cultural and social life.
I ask the question about the unconscious precisely because
of the problem of interpreting the sexual and gender politics of recent
mainstream black cinema. Clearly, the construction of spectatorship in Malcolm X
cannot be wholly explained by relying on empirical data. We can guess
that the construction of gender and sexuality in Spike Lee’s Malcolm X
has more to do with Lee’s own issues around gender as well as cinematic
traditions in the specularization of women’s bodies, and black women’s
bodies, in Hollywood cinema than it has to do with Malcolm X’s life. .
. .
Meanwhile, Daughters of the Dust, a film by
independent black filmmaker Julie Dash, attempts to provide a
corrective to the boyz. The film deliberately sets out to tackle the
problem of upgrading the black female image and gets bogged down in
excessive visuality. Yet again, something crucial has to be occurring
on the level of “the hypothetical point of address of the film as a
discourse.” After all, if it makes no difference how a film deploys its
black bodies, why have they been so relentlessly excluded in the
past?....
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LORRAINE O’GRADY: Critical Interventions
Judith Wilson, 1991
Judith Wilson, 1991
Catalogue essay written for O’Grady’s first gallery solo exhibition, “Lorraine O’Grady,” INTAR Gallery, 420 W 42nd Street, New York City, January 21 – February 22, 1991.
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. . . . Current Investigations:New Strategies of “High Cultural Warfare”Artists should be terrorists, not masseurs. — Hanif Kureishi
The present exhibition extends the shift from performance to photographic installations already demonstrated by
Sisters. Yet, as should be apparent from my description of the latter work’s thematic content, for all her new spareness of form, O’Grady has not surrendered an inch of cultural ground. Like many artists at this time of fundamentalist attacks on freedom of expression and last ditch efforts by a moribund elite to reimpose cultural mandarinism, she sees that she has no choice but to either maintain her embattled stance or lose all hope of creative enfranchisement.
In posing the questions “What should we do? What is there time for?” at the outset in the present show, however, she means to stress the necessity of doing
everything — using every type of tool and technique at our command, refusing the intellectual and political stranglehold of single agendas and strategies, rejecting the aesthetic sterility of monocultural codes of value. Thus, in the rooms she has created here, she aims to underscore the diversity of her own past endeavors and present inclinations.
For example, while the works in the room labeled “Cultural Criticism” (illus. 2) tend to be blatantly inflammatory, the bulk of her work is less directly confrontational. But, given the effects of racism, sexism and class conflict on both the individual psyche and collective attitudes and behavior, there can be little wonder that the work in the rooms “Autobiography” (illus. 3, 10) and “Reclaiming the Black Woman” (illus 1, 4) frequently has political undertones. Similarly, “Work In And/Or For the Community” (illus. 5, 6, 7, 8) conveys O’Grady’s ambivalence about the very term “community” and her preference for shuttling to and fro between notions of a general African-American community and a specific art community, both of which, at times, claim her attention with equal force.
Finally, there is what O’Grady has labeled “the Modernism / Postmodernism cusp” at which she locates her art. What’s modernist about her work is its heavy investment in individual subjectivity, while its postmodernist character arises from her conception of that “subject (especially, the Black subject)” as “culturally fractured.” Like the incessant jockeying of geological plates that produces both gradual changes of topography and sudden eruptions, the unresolved contest of old and new attitudes toward subjectivity to which she alludes is a sign of mental vitality, evidence that the artist’s thought remains fluid, transitional.
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Lorraine O’Grady’s Landscape
Andil Gosine for ARC, 2011
In a new magazine devoted to artists from the Caribbean and its diaspora, a young Trinidadian-Canadian professor at Toronto’s York University sheds light on the role of hybridity in L
andscape (Western Hemisphere) and its complementary work
The Clearing.
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Landscape (Western Hemisphere)
The most recent – and at the time of writing, still in-progress work created by Lorraine O’Grady is an 18-minute video of her hair in motion. Her first foray into video, Landscape (Western Hemisphere) is a breathtakingly beautiful piece that, while adept
as a companion to and extension of O’Grady’s 1991 diptych The Clearing: or Cortez and La Malinche,Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, N and Me, exceeds this originally conceived purpose. An 18-minute video of close-up images of hair blowing might not sound like an especially enticing project, but it is a truly remarkable exercise. I went into the viewing with some apprehension, but a few frames in I became hooked into its evocative sensations. At once ethereal and grounded, O’Grady’s careful editing has resulted in a video that pulls the viewer
into a journey that manages to build tension and curiosity, while at the same time provoking a wildly generative experience of imaginative self-reflection.
As has been my experience with her other work – Art Is and The Clearing especially – I emerge from Landscape (Western Hemisphere) feeling personally connected to O’Grady. I think she isn’t just echoing a philosophical outlook or claiming a similar point of view, but that she’s speaking my journey. Through
the honest, unafraid manner in which she has shared even the messier parts of her life and her critique of contemporary and historical processes through her art, O’Grady is speaking a lot of journeys of postcolonial subjects, perhaps none more than those of her Caribbean compatriots.
O’Grady herself has never stepped foot in the Caribbean. Born to Jamaican parents in Boston in 1934, she has spent most of her life in the United States. Trained as an economist, she did not turn to art production until she was almost 40, when she relocated to New York City. There, she began writing for The
Village Voice and Rolling Stone, and later became a professor of
Dadaist and Futurist literature before identifying herself as
a visual artist. She has since produced consistently bold and
beautiful, and often controversial, work. The 2007 inclusion of her groundbreaking performance piece, Mlle Bourgeoise Noire, in
the MOMA PS1 Wack! Feminist Art Revolution show, revived
interest in her catalogue, and she has since been engaged in a mix of ‘recuperative’ and new projects.
Landscape (Western Hemisphere) began life as a companion to her 1991 diptych, The Clearing, for its exhibition at Buffalo’s Beyond/In Western New York biennial this fall. “I never had any luck in getting people to slow down and look at The Clearing and come to grips with their own understanding of it,” O’Grady says. So to ’slow down’ the viewing experience of a still photograph with its layers of tensions about colonization, ‘race’, nature and sexuality, she made…a video. “I cannot tell you the thought process that arrived at my hair as a landscape,” she says. “It was instantaneous.”
O’Grady saw her hair as an ’objective correlative’ to the truths of history expressed in The Clearing. “I felt that my hair was the result of the action that was taking place in the diptych,” she says, “and this action, for all that may have happened elsewhere in the world, was something uniquely characteristic of the Western Hemisphere.” The black-white sexual encounter depicted in the diptych, O’Grady insists, was a “foundational, ultimately synthesizing action.” Her hair, the kind of hair that only an interracial union could produce, “was something that could only be symptomatic here.” It was a symbol of “the cultural and physiological and mental hybridizations that went into creating the hemisphere’s cultures.”
O’Grady arrived at the video’s title on consideration of this
geography. “I realized that in The Clearing, I had used every section of the Western Hemisphere,” she recalls, “There’s La Malinche [standing in for] Latin America, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings [for] North America, and then me, for the Antilles. I realized I had put it together so that it was all of the Western Hemisphere – North, South and the Caribbean.” Like all the other cultural forms that this exchange produced, her hair could only happen here. “Not that it couldn’t happen in Europe,” O’Grady says, “but it wouldn’t resonate in the same way, it wouldn’t be foundational, it wouldn’t be definitive.”
The Clearing insists on a complicated reading of cultural hybridity, one that is neither a claim of celebration or denunciation, but which rather calls for an appreciation of its always simultaneous and inseparable violences and pleasures. The images comprising the diptych are not an ’either/or’ proposition, but a ’both/and’ description of what is left in the aftermath of the colonial encounter. “My attitude toward hybridity,” O’Grady says, is that it is “essential to understanding
what’s going on in this part of the world, and people’s reluctance to embrace it is part of the problem… The argument for embracing the other is a much more realistic approach than what is generally argued for, which is the maintenance of difference.” Referencing the emergence of contemporary ethno-nationalist black and white movements, she says, “I feel that both of the Others, both black and white cultures are stuck in place.”
Not surprising then that O’Grady is drawn to the creolité that is characteristic of Caribbean culture. Although she has had no physical contact with the birthplace of her parents, and despite her own misgivings about notions of ’community’ and ethnic belonging, she’s sure this heritage has informed her artistic
practice and perspective. . . .
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Lorraine O’Grady’s “Olympia's Maid: Reclaiming Black Female Subjectivity”
by Thomas Feucht-Haviar. 2005
This first-ever article of cultural criticism on the black female
body was to prove germinal and continues to be widely referenced in
scholarly and other works. Occasionally controversial, it has been
frequently anthologized, most recently in Amelia Jones, ed, The Feminism and Cultural Reader, Routledge.
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The female body in the West is not a unitary sign. Rather,
like a coin, it has an obverse and a reverse: on the one side, it is
white; on the other, non-white or, prototypically, black. The two
bodies cannot be separated, nor can one body be understood in isolation
from the other in the West's metaphoric construction of "woman." White
is what woman is; not-white (and the stereotypes not-white gathers in)
is what she had better not be. Even in an allegedly postmodern era, the
not-white woman as well as the not-white man are symbolically and even
theoretically excluded from sexual difference. Their function continues
to be, by their chiaroscuro, to cast the difference of white men and
white women into sharper relief.
A kaleidoscope of not-white females, Asian, Native American,
Latina, and African, have played distinct parts in the West's theater
of sexual hierarchy. But it is the African female who, by virtue of
color and feature and the extreme metaphors of enslavement, is at the
outermost reaches of "otherness." Thus she subsumes all the roles of
the not-white body.
The smiling, bare-breasted African maid, pictured so often in Victorian travel books and National Geographic magazine, got something more than a change of climate and scenery when she came here.
Sylvia Arden Boone, in her book Radiance from the Waters
(1986), on the physical and metaphysical aspects of Mende feminine
beauty, says of contemporary Mende: "Mende girls go topless in the
village and farmhouse. Even in urban areas, girls are bare-breasted in
the house: schoolgirls take off their dresses when they come home, and
boarding students are most comfortable around the dormitories wearing
only a wrapped skirt."
What happened to the girl who was abducted from her village,
then shipped here in chains? What happened to her descendents?
Male-fantasy images on rap videos to the contrary, as a swimmer, in
communal showers at public pools around the country, I have witnessed
black girls and women of all classes showering and shampooing with
their bathing suits on, while beside them their white sisters stand
unabashedly stripped. Perhaps the progeny of that African maiden feel
they must still protect themselves from the centuries-long assault
that characterizes them, in the words of the New York Times
ad placed by a group of African American women to protest the Clarence
Thomas–Anita Hill hearings, as "immoral, insatiable, perverse; the
initiators in all sexual contacts—abusive or otherwise."
Perhaps they have internalized and are cooperating with the
West's construction of not-white women as not-to-be-seen. How could
they/we not be affected by that lingering structure of invisibility,
enacted in the myriad codicils of daily life and still enforced by the
images of both popular and high culture? How not get the message of
what Judith Wilson calls "the legions of black servants who loom in the
shadows of European and European-American aristocratic portraiture," of
whom Laura, the professional model that Edouard Manet used for
Olympia's maid, is in an odd way only the most famous example? Forget
"tonal contrast." We know what she is meant for: she is Jezebel and
Mammy, prostitute and female eunuch, the two-in-one. When we're through
with her inexhaustibly comforting breast, we can use her ceaselessly
open cunt. And best of all, she is not a real person, only a robotic
servant who is not permitted to make us feel guilty, to accuse us as
does the slave in Toni Morrison's Beloved (1987). After she
escapes from the room where she was imprisoned by a father and son,
that outraged woman says: "You couldn't think up what them two done to
me." Olympia's maid, like all the other "peripheral Negroes," is a
robot conveniently made to disappear into the background drapery.
To repeat: castrata and whore, not madonna and whore. Laura's place is
outside what can be conceived of as woman. She is the chaos that must
be excised, and it is her excision that stabilizes the West's construct
of the female body, for the "femininity" of the white female body is
ensured by assigning the not-white to a chaos safely removed from
sight. Thus only the white body remains as the object of a voyeuristic,
fetishizing male gaze. The not-white body has been made opaque by a
blank stare, misperceived in the nether regions of TV.
It comes as no surprise, then, that the imagery of white
female artists, including that of the feminist avant-garde, should
surround the not-white female body with its own brand of erasure. Much
work has been done by black feminist cultural critics (Hazel Carby and
bell hooks come immediately to mind) that examines two successive white
women's movements, built on the successes of two black revolutions,
which clearly shows white women's inability to surrender white skin
privilege even to form basic alliances. But more than politics is at
stake. A major structure o psychic definition would appear threatened
were white women to acknowledge and embrace the sexuality of their
not-white "others." How else explain the treatment by that women's
movement icon, Judy Chicago's Dinner Party (1973-78) of
Sojourner Truth, the lone black guest at the table? When thirty-six of
thirty-nine places are set with versions of Chicago's famous "vagina"
and recognizable slits have been given to such sex bombs as Queen
Elizabeth I, Emily Dickinson, and Susan B. Anthony, what is one to
think when Truth, the mother of four, receives the only plate inscribed
with a face? Certainly Hortense Spillers is justified in stating that
"the excision of the genitalia here is a symbolic castration. By
effacing the genitals, Chicago not only abrogates the disturbing
sexuality of her subject, but also hopes to suggest that her sexual
being did not exist to be denied in the first place."
And
yet Michele Wallace is right to say, even as she laments further
instances of the disempowerment of not-white women in her essay on Privilege
(1990), Yvonne Rainer's latest film, that the left-feminist
avant-garde, "in foregrounding a political discourse on art and
culture," has fostered a climate that makes it "hypothetically possible
to publicly review and interrogate that very history of exclusion and
racism."
What alternative is there really—in creating a world
sensitive to difference, a world where margins can become centers—to a
cooperative effort between white women and women and men of color? But
cooperation is predicated on sensitivity to differences among
ourselves. As Nancy Hartsock has said, "We need to dissolve the false
'we' into its true multiplicity." We must be willing to hear each other
and to call each other by our "true-true name."
To name ourselves rather than be named we must first see
ourselves. For some of us this will not be easy. So long unmirrored in
our true selves, we may have forgotten how we look. Nevertheless, we
can't theorize in a void, we must have evidence. And we—I speak only
for black women here—have barely begun to articulate our life
experience. The heroic recuperative effort by our fiction and
nonfiction writers sometimes feel stuck at the moment before the
Emancipation Proclamation.
It is slow and it is painful. For at the end of every path we take, we
find a body that is always already colonized. A body that has been
raped, maimed, murdered—that is what we must give a healthy present....
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OOPS: The Only Black Model in Italian 'Vogue'? Actually A Maid
By Choire, 9:20 AM on Mon Oct 22 2007
Serendipitous post on absence of black models in fashion magazines, plus comments section — one of which quotes O’Grady’s “Olympia’s Maid” — show the article’s concerns remain alive and well today.
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While American Vogue came up with exactly zero black women in fashion editorial in their October issue, at least Italian Vogue did better in September—they had one! Just one. Except turns out she wasn't a model, as the New York Times assumed.
[from “Corrections,” New York Times]
“An article last Sunday about the fashion industry's reticence to use black models referred incorrectly to a black woman in a maid's outfit pictured in the September issue of Italian Vogue. She was, in fact, a maid at the hotel where the pictures were taken, and was included, the Vogue photographer said, because of her attractiveness and her ability to underscore the pictures' theme of a stereotypical rich white woman who hires ethnic servants; the black woman was not a model dressed as a maid.”
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COMMENTS Show: most popular
art_fiend
1:52 PM on Mon Oct 29 2007
okay, this is AMAZING! i am so glad someone at gawker reads the nytimes "corrections" to point out such supreme ironies. i'm taking a grad seminar on performance art and just read this fascinating essay by lorraine o'grady called "olympia's maid" about "the legions of black servants who loom in the shadows of european and european-american aristocratic portraiture" as exemplified by the black maid in edouard manet's famous painting of "olympia" (in which the black maid's body represents the negative opposite of the idealized white lady's body -- google it!) and basically italian vogue just demonstrates that the world of fashion has not progressed very far in its concept of race relations since 1865! pathetic!!
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puffiehuff
2:56 PM on Mon Oct 22 2007
"...because of her attractiveness and her ability to underscore the pictures' theme of a stereotypical rich white woman who hires ethnic servants..."
Tell us "more" about this "ability" please.
Or didja just mean: "We have no black models because there is a
....
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Wall Text, Beyond/In Western New York
by Carolyn Tennant, for Anderson Gallery, Univ. at Buffalo
Two complementary pieces,
The Clearing, 1991, and
Landscape (Western Hemisphere), 2010, were connected via the concept of the bridge, both in music and in O’Grady’s phrase, “Wherever I stand, I find I have to build a bridge to some other place.”
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“Wherever I stand, I find I have to build a bridge to some other place.” Lorraine O’Grady
By presenting a video installation newly created for Beyond/In Western New York with a twenty-year-old photomontage diptych, Lorraine O’Grady creates a bridge for herself and for viewers, not simply to link two works but as a strategy that (re)engages with each work’s concepts. In music, the bridge serves as a section in the score that, in contrast with the chorus and the verse, prepares the listener for the approaching climax. Her new video Landscape (Western Hemisphere) responds to The Clearing (1991), a work that has not been recuperated by scholars and curators as have many of O’Grady’s other radical works, so as to encourage reconsideration of the earlier work. The new video emerged from a recent dialog with York University Associate Professor Andil Gosine, in which the artist spoke of her artistic intentions for The Clearing and described the work’s original reception, one of silencing and censure. The surrealistic photomontage depicts what filmmaker John Waters calls “the last taboo”: black and white sexual unions which O’Grady depicts as both born from desire and in service to power.
Landscape (Western Hemisphere) presents The Body as a landscape, harmoniously addressing many of the conceptual themes of the original diptych, later re-titled by the artist as The Clearing: or Cortez and La Malinche, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, N. and Me. When the two works are presented together, a new space is created—one where intertextuality and intersubjectivity can coexist. Just as the distinct panels of the diptych both function in contrast yet are seen together, the video and the diptych forge a “space between,” allowing the viewer greater access to the silenced work. O’Grady takes us to the bridge.
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“Lorraine O’Grady,” Alternating Currents
Carolyn Tennant, 2010
Catalogue essay for Beyond/In Western New York, the Buffalo biennial, on O’Grady’s two-part exhibit: her photomontage diptych
The Clearing: or Cortez and La Malinche, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, N. and Me, 1991; and a new video complement to it, Landscape (Western Hemisphere), 2010.
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LORRAINE O’GRADY
American, b. 1934 / Lives and works in New York, NY
Not long after her diptych The Clearing, 1991, appeared as part of her first solo exhibition, Lorraine O’Grady expanded the work’s title as a way to explicate its meaning. Unlike other work featured in BodyGround, an installation of photomontages, this piece encountered a particularly negative reaction. In this investigation of interracial relationships, the artist uses the visual language of Surrealism to represent the white male/black female union. With its concurrent display of eroticism and domination, the work exposed enduring cultural anxieties. Most disturbing, however, was the resistance of some audiences to engage with the work at all. There was no debate about the work’s aesthetic or conceptual basis; instead, those who might participate in such a dialogue ignored it completely, censoring what proved too provocative. Dismissing the diptych was an attempt to silence it, but when O’Grady renamed The Clearing, she began a process of recuperation. Expanding the title to The Clearing: or Cortez and La Malinche, Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings, N. and Me, the artist reveals her place in a larger historic trajectory: as both an African Caribbean American with an inherited bicultural background, and as an active participant in interracial relationships.
The Clearing… demonstrates how the diptych, as a formal device and a conceptual tool, serves a strategic function in O’Grady’s work. The left panel presents a naked couple in an ecstatic embrace, floating in the sky, hovering above the trees; on the ground below, a young boy and girl—the offspring of this union—run after a ball as it rolls towards a pile of the adults’ discarded clothing, amongst which a handgun is seen. The right panel portrays a man and a woman on the ground in the same landscape, however, their bodies are arranged in a sinister pose. Clothed in chain mail, a skull replacing his face, the white man leans dominantly over the black woman’s naked body and fondles her breast. Her face is turned away, her arms stiff at her sides, her eyes fixed on the sky above. Rather than an attempt to negotiate different points of view, O’Grady uses the diptych to contain opposing forces. Once the “either/or” fallacy is revealed, the artist can reframe binary oppositions as “both/and.” In this way, O’Grady’s work dismantles Western dualism and those false dichotomies that sustain systems of power.
Two decades later, O’Grady continues an ongoing process of recuperation. Even as a bicultural President sits in the White House, The Clearing… remains radical, perhaps, the artist suggests, because the work has not been “de-fanged.” “Silencing is a process that needs to be constantly reinforced, but un-silencing also needs to be reinforced.” Her latest efforts involve the introduction of a new panel, a time-based video installation that she now considers part of the diptych. Like the expanded title, the video provides yet another way to reclaim subjectivity. Working with one of her most striking characteristics, her curly mane, as a metaphor, O’Grady opens the work up to new contemporary meanings; for those with multi-ethnic backgrounds, hair has provided evidence of one’s background long before its use in DNA testing. By including a sound collage composed from a dialogue about the work and her experiences as an artist, as a woman, and as a multi-ethnic artist, O’Grady, quite literally, gives it voice and breaks a decades-old silence.
Since her earliest interventions, O’Grady’s art has served as institutional critique. “The black female’s body needs less to be rescued from the masculine ‘gaze’ than to be sprung from a historic script surrounding her with signification while at the same time, and not paradoxically, it erases her completely,” she wrote in a postscript to her widely anthologized article “Olympia’s Maid: Reclaiming Black Female Subjectivity.” Visualizing what once was only recognized through its absence, she reminds audiences that invisibility and silencing is not simply an art-historical problem, but a continuing crisis in contemporary art.
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