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@dreamingwalls
Who is Sonya Clark?
Sonya Clark is a prominent Afro-Caribbean artist known for her innovative and thought-provoking, contemporary art. Clark was born in 1967 in Kingston, Jamaica, but later moved to the United States, where she pursued her passion for art. She is currently a professor of Art at Amherst College in Amherst, Massachusetts.(SonyaClark.com)
Sonya Clark has achieved recognition for her unique exploration of themes related to identity, race, and history, often using materials like hair, textiles, and everyday objects to create powerful statements. Clark's work has been exhibited in galleries around the world, including the National Museum of Women in the Arts. You can visit her online exhibition “Tatter, Bristle, and Mend” which combines her past works with her more recent art and showcases her “ability to rework concepts and materials over time” (NMWA.com).
The exhibition at the NMWA features a picture of the artist's hands holding her mothers white hair, titled “Mom’s Wisdom or Cotton Candy” (NMWA.com). Clarks' maternal ancestors were forced from Africa to the Caribbean, as part of the slave trade that fueled the sugar industry. The hair resembles cotton candy - made from sugar, but represents so much more!
Textiles are a very powerful way of speaking and Sonya Clark's artistic vision combines elements of social commentary, heritage, and identity, making her a significant figure in the contemporary art world and an influential voice in discussions on race and cultural diversity.
Author Amelia Jones of “Seeing Differently” makes it clear that nothing can be of more pressing political importance, where everyday in every newspaper and on blogs, tweets, etc. that “issues of identification still persist in haunting our every discussion about what is going on in contemporary society”. (pg.1) Sonya Clark and her art touches on the issues of identification and her use of textiles are used as a giant “text” for making those important connections through her skillful artwork.
REFERENCES
Amazon.com: Seeing Differently: A History and Theory of Identification and the Visual Arts
Sonya Clark
Sonya Clark: Tatter, Bristle, and Mend | Online Exhibition| NMWA
By: Andria Jones
Representing Women - UNCG -Fall23
“La Ruta del Progreso,” is a collaborative project between photographer Erika Rodriguez, visual artist Natalia Lasalle Morillo, and photographer Christopher Gregory, from Puerto Rico and one of the projects featured in this year’s Latin American Foto Festival. Puerto Rico has been facing major political and economic turmoil for about 10 years, facing the largest municipal debt crisis in the world, and was ravaged by a massive hurricane in 2018 that left nearly 3,000 people dead, with some studies estimating an even higher death toll. “La Ruta is a testament to the idea that to understand the current political reality, you have to look at the decisions that led to this point,” Gregory told Global Citizen. “Our main goal with the project is to look at the seminal moment of history of the 1950s when Puerto Rico was granted more autonomy and industrialized, through this road which was built during that time in the name of progress,” he added. “La Ruta does not necessarily make the case that progress did not arrive, but rather asks the viewer to make that determination. Progress, as the project documents in all its parts, is a loaded and complicated term.” The Latin American Foto Festival, the second edition of the annual photography exhibition, is on display now through July 21, and takes place on the streets of the South Bronx and at the Bronx Documentary Center in New York City. This year’s festival shows poetic images that are not simply traditional photojournalism, and all share one main goal: to generate awareness about the current situation in Latin America and the opportunity for the wider community to witness and understand the diverse stories throughout the region. Read more about Latin American Foto Festival and the projects that are highlighted at this link. (📷: © Christopher Gregory)
ANGEL OTERO
Sarcophagus (Eat the Meat and Spit Out the Bones), 2019
Oil skins on fabric
274.3 x 436.9 x 10.2 cm
Angel Otero was born 1981 in San Juan Puerto Rico. He is a contemporary visual artist specializing in painting. Otero’s work is characterized by an interest in personal history, expressionistic abstraction, and Spanish Baroque painterly traditions. He lives and works in Brooklyn but splits his time between New York and Chicago.
Bibiana Suarez at NMPRAC in Visual Art Source
Bibiana Suarez, “De: Lata(What Gives Us Away),” National Museum of Puerto Rican Arts and Culture, Chicago, Illinois
Continuing through August 1, 2022
by Robin Dluzen
Bibiana Suárez looks at branding with a critical eye, in particular the visual marketing of Hispanic/Latinx food products. Her current exhibition, “De: Lata (What Gives Us Away),” addresses the depictions of women on food packaging, their images often put in service of evoking “authenticity,” exotification, nostalgia, and tradition to mobilize a person to make a purchase. Suárez’s works here are Pop in their style, embracing the formal aspects of her subject matter, though her representational prowess is also evidenced in the individualized portraits of real women placed where their fictitious counterparts would have been. The works in “De: Lata” contrast with the stereotype that a woman’s domain is limited to the kitchen, one that is still embraced within food brands’ marketing strategies. The sitters in Suárez’s pieces are depicted to highlight all manner of careers and life stories: Poet Juana Iris Goergen; artist María Martínez-Cañas; educator and researcher of Latinx LGBTQ+ communities, Lourdes Torres; Gladys Rosa-Mendoza, a designer and visual strategist; painter Cándida Alvarez; and a trio including Dolce Orocio, Antonia Marroquín, and the artist’s sister, Marinés Suárez, women whose unique personal histories are captured in the compositions of their portraits.
Bibiana Suárez, “La Fiera (Untamed),” 2021-2022,acrylic on canvas, 86 x 65.“ Photo: Tom Van Eynde The exhibition text by Olga U. Hererra, PhD. explains that Suárez’s sitters collaborate with the artist on their likenesses. With this agency, the resulting paintings feel free of the confines of the male gaze. In “La Fiera (Untamed),” distinguished professor of Latin American and Latino Studies at the University of Illinois at Chicago, María de los Ángeles Torres, is not smiling, submissive or particularly welcoming, unlike the illustrated women from the food packaging. The professor seems to regard the viewer sideways, her mouth set firmly, her eyebrows arched skeptically. Her authoritative gaze is powerful, effectively nullifying the issue of objectification. Torres doesn’t invite you to look at her so much as she dares you to. And while this portrait, and the others, are indeed breaks from the stereotypical relationship between women and food, Suárez puts imagery of food to a different use: to symbolize aspects of her sitters’ histories or characteristics. Below Torres’ visage is a Seder plate topped with rice and beans, combining her Cuban heritage and the Judaism of her family.
Bibiana Suárez, "La Fajona (The Hard Worker),” 2021-2022, acrylic on canvas, 49 1/8 x 75 ¼.“ Photo: Tom Van Eynde There is a single piece in “De: Lata” that does not contain a representational female likeness, and it is Suárez’s own self-portrait. “La Suárez (Gandulera Rubia)” (2005-2011) is the earliest piece in the exhibition, an inkjet print on aluminum, making it the work that most closely resembles the kinds of graphics the artist scrutinizes. A photograph of pigeon peas (used in arroz con gandules, Puerto Rico’s national dish) is emblazoned with the artist’s surname, as well as her date of birth and her “net weight.” In the presence of Suárez’s recent portraits, this piece seems particularly wry and ironic, with Suárez “marketing” herself like something that is to be consumed. Simultaneously, “La Suárez (Gandulera Rubia)” is imbued with declarative power, asserting her physical existence with the irrefutable facts that ground her as a flesh-and-blood woman, not some formulaic cliche.
Installation view of Bibiana Suárez, “De: Lata (What Gives Us Away),“at the National Museum of Puerto Rican Arts & Culture, Chicago, Illinois. Photo: Tom Van Eynde Complexity is key throughout the works of “De: Lata.” Suárez peppers these portraits with plenty of blatant visual cues that speak to her sitters’ stories: the black Puerto Rican flag on Rosa-Mendoza’s shoulder; the photo corner that denotes Martínez-Cañas’ profession; the airplane in Torres’ canvas signifying Operación Pedro Pan. However, there are just as many cues that would evade us, if not for the artist providing some explanation. The image of a dry cleaner’s hanger recalls the place where Suárez and Orocio first met. Rosa-Mendoza’s space suit symbolizes her mother’s childhood ambitions for her. As much as Suárez has “branded” each of these women in a manner that celebrates their accomplishments and individuality, the ambiguous clues serve as a reminder that a woman’s biography is not something to be consumed in its entirety by whomever wants it. There is also tremendous power in details kept intimate.
Poor People’s Art: A (Short) Visual History of Poverty in the United States at USF Contemporary Art Museum in Tampa uses installations and artworks to tell the story of, and expand perspectives on, The Poor People’s Campaign- from its origins in the late 1960s to the present day form, as well as comment on poverty and other social issues. Both educational and engaging, it shows that despite long struggles and some progress, we are still very far from much needed social change, especially in regards to poverty.
The museum also produced a free full color, 48 page workbook that you can pick up there or download as a PDF that can be downloaded from their website.
From the gallery’s website-
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. is well known for his “I Have a Dream” speech, yet much less emphasis is placed on his campaign to seek justice for America’s poor, “The Poor People’s Campaign.” This was a multi-cultural, multi-faith, multi-racial movement aimed at uniting poor people and their allies to demand an end to poverty and inequality. Fifty-three years after Dr. King’s death, the Reverend William Barber II launched a contemporary push to fulfill MLK’s ambitious brief — one that calls for a “revolution of values” that unites poor and impacted communities across the country. The exhibition Poor People’s Art: A (Short) Visual History of Poverty in the United States represents a visual response to Dr. King’s “last great dream” as well as Reverend Barber’s recent “National Call for Moral Revival.”
With artworks spanning more than 50 years, the exhibition is divided into two parts: Resurrection (1968-1994) and Revival (1995-2022). Resurrection includes photographs, paintings, prints, videos, sculptures, books, and ephemera made by a radically inclusive company of American artists, from Jill Freedman’s photographs of Resurrection City, the tent enclave that King’s followers erected on the National Mall in 1968, to John Ahearns’ plaster cast sculpture Luis Fuentes, South Bronx (1979). Revival offers contemporary engagement across a range of approaches, materials, and points of view. Conceived in a declared opposition to poverty, racism, militarism, environmental destruction, health inequities, and other interlocking injustices, this exhibition shows how artists in the US have visualized poverty and its myriad knock-on effects since 1968. Participating artists include John Ahearn, Nina Berman, Martha De la Cruz, Jill Freedman, Rico Gatson, Mark Thomas Gibson, Corita Kent, Jason Lazarus, Miguel Luciano, Hiram Maristany, Narsiso Martinez, Adrian Piper, Robert Rauschenberg, Rodrigo Valenzuela, William Villalongo & Shraddha Ramani, and Marie Watt.
From the museum’s wall plaque about the images from the artists above-
A multimedia visual artist whose work explores themes of history, popular culture, and social justice, Miguel Luciano revisits the history of the Young Lords, a revolutionary group of young Puerto Rican activists who organized for social justice in their communities beginning in the late 1960s. Luciano’s first contribution to Poor People’s Art is a vinyl banner from the public art project Mapping Resistance: The Young Lords in El Barrio (2019), a collaboration with artist Hiram Maristany. It features the photograph “Young Lords Member with Pa’lante Newspaper (1970)” by Maristany, who was the official photographer of the Young Lords and a founding member of the New York chapter. This banner, along with nine other enlarged Maristany photographs, were installed throughout East Harlem at the same locations where their history occurred 50 years prior.
Luciano’s second contribution to Poor People’s Art is the sculpture The People’s Pulpit (2022), a repurposed vintage pulpit from the First Spanish Methodist Church in East Harlem. The Young Lords famously took over the church in 1969 and renamed it “The People’s Church”; they hosted free breakfast programs, clothing drives, health screenings, and other community services there. In this exhibition, The People’s Pulpit features an historic recording of Nuyorican poet Pedro Pietri reciting the celebrated poem Puerto Rican Obituary during the Young Lord’s takeover of The People’s Church.
The central sculpture in the second photo-
Afro-Taino artist Martha De la Cruz fashioned her sculptural installation Techo de sin (Roof of Without), 2021, from stolen, scavenged and donated materials found in Southwest Florida. According to the artist, “Florida is home to a large population of Latin American migrants who have ended up in the US largely due to economic pressures, exploitation and veins of power etched by Europe and the US.” Her powerful work deals with the results of this disjunction and the “symptoms thereabouts (e.g. houselessness, fugitiv-ity, government corruption, and income disparity, etc.).” According to De la Cruz, the word “sin” is a common Dominican mispronunciation for the word “zinc.” The sculpture is animated by a single light bulb that turns on for just ten minutes a day.
From the wall plaque about the Lazarus installation (structure in the 3th, 5th and 6th photos)-
Jason Lazarus’s sculptural installation Resurrection City/Poor People’s Campaign: A National call for Moral Revival/A Third Reconstruction (2023) is anchored in the artist’s historical research and several key photographs of Resurrection City. A tent-like shelter inspired by the temporary residences that populated the 1968 mass protest, the interactive sculpture contains simple sleeping quarters and a curated library filled with physical literature and ephemera centered on both the 1968 Poor People’s Campaign and the 2018 Poor People’s Campaign: A National Call for Moral Revival, co-led by Rev. Dr.William Barber and Rev. Dr. Liz Theoharis.
The library allows for audiences to trace, listen, and talk about the history of advocating for the poor, from 1865 to the present. Additionally, the artist provides a custom transcription (and a QR hyperlink) to Barber’s 49-minute address on the syndicated radio show “The Breakfast Club” in which he carefully outlines his powerful vision for how we might address poverty going forward.
About Jill Freedman’s photograph above-
In the spring of 1968, the talented young street photographer Jill Freedman quit her day job as a copywriter in New York City to join the Poor People’s March on Washington. Freedman lived in Resurrection City for the entire six weeks of the encampment’s existence, photographing its residents as they rallied, made speeches, protested in front of government buildings, confronted police, built makeshift kitchens, organized clothing swaps, and dealt with flooding, petty crime, and illness. One of the most important postwar documentarians, and one of the few women photographers of the era, Freedman captured it all. Freedman’s 2017 book, Resurrection City, 1968-from which this exhibition draws a dozen powerful images-showcases the photographs that she made as a participant in the original Poor People’s Campaign. In multiple ways, Freedman’s images are the sympathetic perch upon much of which much of the present exhibition loosely hangs.
This exhibition closes ¾/23.
Линия 24 (Sketch)
Go with the data flow
Jeroen Barendse, Thomas Castro and Dimitri Nieuwenhuizen found the Dutch design studio Lust with a team of 12 designers. Lust is in the field of graphic and digital both multidisciplinary.They have built a broad portfolio include graphics, typography, books, posters, data visualization and interactive installations. They are best known for their Data Wall, Wall Poster and the interactive Twitter based installation at the Centre Pompidou in 2012.
Lust has always been interested in typography; they see typography as the starting point of information. Where traditional typeface designer is concerned with creating permanent graphic form of written content, it’s about Lust, creating dynamic form that is constantly changing, depending on the contents of the transfer. Lust has a fascination how people experience the real world and the virtual information and explore content through multiple levels of perception and communication. They have interested in how you can add value to the semantic interpretation of the data.
Mark Webster, spring 2013 http://www.eyemagazine.com/feature/article/go-with-the-data-flow
🧁 .summoning. (2019)
leading up to my fav spooky month i will be sharing some of my favourites from all the halloween + drawlloween inspired art that i've made over the years
instagram: @winterofherdiscontent
People who are younger than you but taller
People who are younger than you but better than you at something
People who are younger than you
People
Being turned into a llama
A LLAMA?! HE’S SUPPOSED TO BE DEAD!!!
yeah… weird
This
Jean-Michel Basquiat in his studio in the basement of Annina Nosei Gallery in 1982.
Photos by Marion Busch
Jean-Michel Basquiat photographed by Lee Jaffe, 1983.
Circle Study #11, 1972, Benny Andrews
Medium: oil,collage
Rock of Ages #1, Edward Burtynsky
Carrara Marble Quarries #24. Carrara, Italy. Edward Burtynsky, 1993
Owens Lake #5, California, Photo © Edward Burtynsky, 2009
Edward Burtynsky China 2007-2012 “Mass consumerism and the resulting degradation of our environment intrinsic to the process of making things to keep us happy and fulfilled frightens me. I no longer see my world as delineated by countries, with borders, or language, but as 7 billion humans living off a single, finite planet.” - Edward Burtynsky