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Hank Willis Thomas

Hank Willis Thomas (born 1976 in Plainfield, New Jersey; lives and works in Brooklyn, NY) is an American conceptual artist working primarily with themes related to identity, history, and popular culture.[1]

Hank Willis Thomas
Born1976 (age 46–47)
NationalityAmerican
Alma materMFA/MA California College of the Arts,
BFA Tisch School of the Arts
MovementConceptual art
SpouseRujeko Hockley

Early life and education

Hank Willis Thomas was born in 1976 in Plainfield, New Jersey to Hank Thomas, a jazz musician, and Deborah Willis, artist, photographer, curator and educator.[2] Thomas attended Duke Ellington School of the Arts as a Museum Studies student.[3]

Thomas holds a B.F.A. in Photography and Africana studies from New York University (1998)[4] and an M.A./M.F.A. in Photography and Visual Criticism from the California College of the Arts (2004).[4] In 2017, he received honorary doctorates from the Maryland Institute College of Art and the Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts.

Career

His work has been exhibited throughout the United States and abroad including the International Center of Photography, New York; Guggenheim Museum Bilbao, Spain; Musée du quai Branly, Paris; Hong Kong Arts Centre, Hong Kong, and the Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art, Netherlands. Thomas’ work is included in numerous public collections including the Museum of Modern Art, New York; Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York; Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; Brooklyn Museum, New York; High Museum of Art, Atlanta, and the National Gallery of Art, Washington D.C. His collaborative projects include Question Bridge: Black Males, In Search Of The Truth (The Truth Booth), and For Freedoms, which was awarded the 2017 ICP Infinity Award for New Media and Online Platform. In 2012, Question Bridge: Black Males debuted at the Sundance Film Festival and was selected for the New Media Grant from the Tribeca Film Institute. Thomas is also the recipient of the Guggenheim Fellowship (2018), AGO Photography Prize (2017), Soros Equality Fellowship (2017), and is a member of the New York City Public Design Commission. Thomas is represented by Jack Shainman Gallery, New York; Ben Brown Fine Arts, London and Hong Kong; Goodman Gallery, South Africa; and Marauni Mercier, Belgium. Thomas lives and works in Brooklyn, NY.

Hank Willis Thomas' collaborative projects have been featured at the Sundance Film Festival and installed publicly at the Oakland International Airport, The Oakland Museum of California and the University of California, San Francisco.

Thomas explores the representation of the African-American male body in visual culture in his B(r)anded Series.[5][6] Writing in The Guardian, critic Arwa Mahdawi observed: "Thomas's work 'unbrands' advertising: stripping away the commercial context, and leaving the exposed image to speak for itself."[7] His two screenprints of 2013, And I Can't Run and Blow the Man Down, express the erasure of past injustices to the black male body by printing photographs of humiliations or executions of black men on retro-reflective vinyl (commonly used for street signs), rendering them invisible except under flash photography.[8]

 
Installation at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama

Thomas has a permanent installation at The National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery, Alabama. The piece, titled Rise Up, depicts a cement wall with statues of black heads and bodies emerging from the top of the wall whose arms are raised in surrender. The piece comments on the incidents of police violence and police brutality that are prevalent in current American society.[9]

In 2017, Thomas also unveiled his permanent public artwork Love Over Rules in San Francisco and All Power to All People in Opa Locka, Florida.

Thomas has acted as a visiting professor at CCA and in the MFA programs at Maryland Institute College of Art and ICP/Bard and has lectured at Yale University, Princeton University, the Birmingham Museum of Art, and the Musée du Quai Branly in Paris.

Thomas is the winner of the first ever Aperture West Book Prize for his monograph Pitch Blackness (November, 2008). His work has been featured in other publications including Reflections in Black (Norton, 2000), and the exhibitions along with accompanying publications 25 under 25: Up-and-Coming American Photographers (CDS, 2003), and 30 Americans (RFC, 2008).[10] Other major publications include Aperture's Hank Willis Thomas: All Things Being Equal... (2018), and Philadelphia Photo Arts Center (PPAC)'s The Philly Block Project (2017).

Thomas' first comprehensive survey Hank Willis Thomas: All Things Being Equal... opened at the Portland Art Museum in fall 2019 and will travel to additional U.S. museums in 2020. The exhibition will highlight Thomas' devotion to reframing perspectives on difficult issues central to American history and the representation of race and the politics of visual culture.[11]

Collaborative projects

For Freedoms

Founded in 2016 along with artist Eric Gottesman, Michelle Woo, and Wyatt Gallery,[12] For Freedoms is an anti-partisan platform for creative civic engagement, discourse, and direct action. The name was inspired by American artist Norman Rockwell's paintings of Franklin D. Roosevelt's Four Freedoms (1941)— freedom of speech, freedom of worship, freedom from want, and freedom from fear. Through exhibitions, installations, and public programs, the organization is established to deepen public discussions on civic issues and core values, and to advocate for equality, dialogue, and civic participation.

In 2018, For Freedoms launched the 50 State Initiative, the largest creative collaboration in U.S. history. In the fall of 2018, For Freedoms launched a major billboard campaign in every state, including Washington D.C. and Puerto Rico. The campaign included over 150 contemporary artists, including Marilyn Minter, Rashid Johnson, Guerrilla Girls, and Theaster Gates, among others.

In October 2018, For Freedoms also launched a photo campaign entitled Four Freedoms. In collaboration with photographers Emily Shur and Wyatt Gallery, Thomas and For Freedoms transformed Norman Rockwell's depictions of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt's 1941 address to Congress, which articulated FDR's vision of the four basic human freedoms.[13] Thomas wrote that "The image haunted me because of the world we live in. I wanted to imagine what it would look like today."[13] Through dozens of iterations of Rockwell's original four paintings, the 82 images in the campaign attempted to reflect the immeasurable diversity of American identities today. Celebrities such as Rosario Dawson, Dolores Huerta, Gina Belafonte, Van Jones, Jesse Williams, Robert A. Nakamura and Karen L. Ishizuka, Kiran Gandhi, Michael Ealy, Saul Williams, Rodney Barnette, and others were included in the reinterpretations. The new version of the images were widely shared on social media and Instagram, including by celebrities such as Alicia Keys and Jada Pinkett-Smith.[14]

The Writing On The Wall

Together with American academic, cultural critic and activist Baz Dreisinger, Thomas and Dreisinger's organization, Incarceration Nations Network, have collaborated to create the traveling exhibition and installation, The Writing On The Wall (TWOTW), constructed from over 2,000 pages of writing and art by incarcerated and formerly incarcerated people across the world.[15] TWOTW was first displayed on New York City's High Line in November, 2019, and throughout the COVID-19 pandemic the collaborators have adapted the content to be projected onto city buildings and landscapes, including jails and courthouses – first in New York, then in Washington D.C. and Ohio. The installation's first international showing was in Mexico City in late June.[16]

Cause Collective

The Cause Collective is a team of artists, designers and ethnographers creating innovative art in the public realm. Their projects explore and enliven public spaces by creating a dynamic conversation between issues, sites and the public audience. By exploring ideas that affect and shape society, the collective seeks to add the "public" back into public space and art.

The Long March

The Long March is a 27 monitor installation commissioned by the recently renovated Birmingham Shuttlesworth International Airport. The installation incorporates depictions of movement, migration and marching from different eras in Alabama history, for instance, the Civil War, the Children's March, the Selma Marches, football marching bands, the railroad, and migrations to the “Magic City.” The long row of monitors (the long march) track to the center of the wall and meld into a kaleidoscope. The kaleidoscope is tiled in the shape of a Camellia – the Alabama state flower. The Camellia, in this instance, is a repository of past and present motion that represents the flowering that grows out of movement. The kaleidoscopic mixes and melds the long march footage creating new emergent patterns, forms and colors. The travelers who will encounter the piece will be able to envision themselves as part of this mosaic that is symbolized through Alabama's relationship to ‘the march’ as a form of historical progression.

In Search of the Truth (The Truth Booth)
 
The collaborative traveling artwork is sited in front of the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma, Alabama, September, 2018

Thomas is working on the long-term and global public art project In Search of the Truth (The Truth Booth). Also known as "The Truth Booth" it is in collaboration with Ryan Alexiev, Jim Ricks, and Will Sylvester, all members of Cause Collective, a team of artists, designers, and ethnographers creating innovative art in the public realm.[17][18] The New York Times writes: "The “Truth Booth,” [is] a roving, inflatable creation by a group of artists calling itself the Cause Collective. The booth, in the shape of a cartoon word bubble with “TRUTH” in bold letters on its side, serves as a video confessional. Visitors are asked to sit inside and finish the politically and metaphysically loaded sentence that begins, “The truth is ...”".[19] To date, the project has travelled Ireland, Afghanistan, South Africa, Australia, the United States, and Mexico. It embarked on a world tour at the Galway Arts Festival, Ireland in 2011. It debuted in the US during the LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph in Charlottesville, VA in June 2012.

Throughout this long-term project the video footage is compiled and edited into a video artwork. To expand and engage with audiences, the movements of "The Truth Booth" and sample responses are tracked, edited, and categorized on a website. Ultimately, the goal of this project is to try to capture as many definitions, confessions and thoughts on The Truth as possible, creating a diverse ‘portrait’ of people across the globe. It was first supported by the Arts Council of Ireland, and the San Francisco Foundation.

Question Bridge: Black Males

In collaboration with artists Chris Johnson, Bayeté Ross Smith and Kamal Sinclair, Question Bridge: Black Males is a platform for black men of all ages and backgrounds to ask and candidly respond to questions that are rarely discussed in public. Through video mediated question and answer exchange, diverse members of this “demographic” bridge economic, political, geographic, and generational divisions. The Question Bridge campaign seeks to represent and redefine Black male identity in America. Additional collaborators include Jesse Williams, Delroy Lindo, and Dr. Deborah Willis.

Monument Lab's citywide public art exhibition

From September 14 to November 10, 2017, Monument Lab began a citywide public art exhibition throughout ten Philadelphia squares and parks in collaboration with the Mural Arts Program. Hank Willis Thomas installed a sculpture entitled, “All Power to all people” which consisted of an afro pick standing eight feet tall near Philadelphia city hall.

Accusations of plagiarism

In 2018, Thomas was accused of plagiarism by South African photographer Graeme Williams.[20] A photograph that Williams took in 1990 of black children in the foreground and white policemen in the background was modified by Thomas, removing colour from the background. The photograph was exhibited at the Johannesburg Art Fair, with an asking price of US$36000, without attribution or mention of Williams. Thomas defended himself saying that what he had done was "akin to sampling, remixing".

In a separate case, South African photographer, Peter Magubane, who has photo-documented life in South Africa for six decades, discovered that Thomas had also altered one of his photos, similarly putting "a white fade over the background", without seeking permission from Magubane. Thomas defended his actions, saying that asking permission to use the photograph was a form of censorship. Magubane responded that Thomas' actions was arrogant, shameful and disrespectful.[21][22]

Selected images

Awards

2018

2017

2007

Permanent installation

  • Unity, Public sculpture, Brooklyn, NY. 2019.
  • Raise Up, Permanent Installation, Equal Justice Initiative's National Memorial for Peace and Justice, Montgomery, AL. Unveiled April 26, 2018.[26]
  • Love Over Rules, Permanent Installation, Sites Unseen, San Francisco, CA. Unveiled November 9, 2017.[27]
  • All Power to All People, Permanent Installation, Opa-locka Art, Opa-locka, FL. Unveiled October 17, 2017.[28]

Selected exhibitions

Solo / two-person

2019

2018

2017

2016

  • Evidence of Things Not Seen, Kadist, San Francisco, California
  • Unbranded: A Century of White Women, 1915 - 2015, Weatherspoon Art Museum, Greensboro, North Carolina

2015

2014

2013

2012

  • Hank Willis Thomas: Believe It, SCAD Galleries, La Galerie Pfriem, Lacoste

2011

2010

2009

2008

2005

Family

Thomas's mother, Deborah Willis, Ph.D., is an art photographer and an NYU professor. His father, also Hank Thomas, is a jazz musician, film producer, physicist, and a member of the Black Panther Party.[31] Thomas is married to Rujeko Hockley, assistant curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art.[32][31]

Inspiration

Born in 1976, Thomas was amazed that less than ten years before he was born people were still fighting to affirm their humanity.[33] Inspired by the 1968 Memphis Sanitation Workers's slogan "I am a man", Thomas became interested in exploring how many different ways that phrase could be read.[33] Thomas's work focuses on framing and context.[33] He explores ideas about how history and culture are framed, who does the framing, and how this affects our interpretation of reality.[33] In his work he focuses on speaking about popular culture and does so by using a variety of different mediums.[33] He specifically likes to use photography because of the way you can edit a photograph, which can be a way of retelling history.[33]

Thomas has also stated that the artist Kerry James Marshall was a big influence on him and his work.[34]

Bibliography

  • Willis, Deborah, Hank Willis Thomas, and Kalia Brooks. Progeny: Deborah Willis and Hank Willis Thomas. New York: Miriam and Ira D. Wallach Art Gallery, Columbia University, 2009. ISBN 978-1-884919-23-7
  • Thomas, Hank Willis, René De Guzman, and Robin D G Kelley. Pitch Blackness. New York: Aperture, 2008. ISBN 978-1-59711-072-3
  • Harney, Elizabeth, editor. Flava: Wedge Curatorial Projects 1997-2007. Toronto: Wedge Curatorial Projects, 2008. Page 131. ISBN 978-0-9783370-0-1
  • Rhoden, William C. Forty Million Dollar Slaves: The Rise, Fall, and Redemption of the Black Athlete. New York: Crown Publishers, 2006. Page 182. ISBN 0-609-60120-2
  • Thomas, Hank Willis, Kambui Olujimi, and Carla Williams. Winter in America. San Francisco: 81 Press, 2006. ISBN 0-9777336-0-2
  • Armstrong, Elizabeth, Rita Gonzalez, and Karen Moss. California Biennial 2006. Newport Beach, California: Orange County Museum of Art, 2006. Pages 152–5. ISBN 0-917493-42-7
  • Murray, D. C. "Hank Willis Thomas at Lisa Dent." Art in America. December 2006: p. 165.
  • Dawsey, Jill. "Hank Willis Thomas." Artforum.com, March 2006.
  • Golden, Thelma, and Christine Y. Kim. Frequency. New York: Studio Museum in Harlem, 2005. Pages 7, 88–89. ISBN 0-942949-30-7
  • Bing, Alison. "Image Consciousness." SFGate.com, 28 October 2004: p. 78.
  • Willis, Deborah. Black: a Celebration of a Culture. Irvington, New York: Hylas Publishing, 2004. Pages 221, 230, 290. ISBN 1-59258-051-3
  • Addo, Ping-Ann. Pieces of Cloth, Pieces of Culture: Tapa from Tonga & the Pacific Islands. Oakland, California: Center for Art and Public Life, California College of the Arts, 2004.
  • Hill, Iris Tillman. 25 Under 25: Up-and-Coming American Photographers. Brooklyn, New York: powerHouse Books in association with the Center for Documentary Studies, 2003. ISBN 1-57687-192-4
  • Gore, Al, and Tipper Gore. The Spirit of Family. New York: Henry Holt, 2002. Pages 14–5. ISBN 0-8050-6894-5
  • M.I.L.K. Project. Friendship: a Celebration of Humanity. New York, New York: Morrow, 2001. ISBN 0-06-620970-6
  • Willis, Deborah. Reflections in Black: a History of Black Photographers, 1840 to the Present. New York: W.W. Norton, 2000. Pages 257–8, 277. ISBN 0-393-04880-2
  • Carroll, Rebecca. Sugar in the Raw: Voices of Young Black Girls in America. New York: Crown Trade Paperbacks, 1997. Cover. ISBN 0-517-88497-6
  • Cottman, Michael H, Deborah Willis, and Linda Tarrant-Reid. The Family of Black America. New York: Crown Trade Paperbacks, 1996. Pages 122–6. ISBN 0-517-88822-X
  • Cottman, Michael H, and Deborah Willis. Million Man March. New York: Crown Trade Paperbacks, 1995. Pages 13, 39, 81. ISBN 0-517-88763-0

References

  1. ^ "Hank Willis Thomas - Jack Shainman Gallery". www.jackshainman.com. Retrieved 2019-01-31.
  2. ^ The HistoryMakers. Deborah Willis biography, ArtMakers, June 27, 2007. Accessed August 1, 2009.
  3. ^ "Duke Ellington School of the Arts".
  4. ^ a b . Beth Schiffer Creative Darkroom. Archived from the original on 2016-10-13. Retrieved 2016-04-07.
  5. ^ Dutra, Robyn. "The New Regime: Hank Willis Thomas." Black Book, December 4, 2008. Accessed August 4, 2009.
  6. ^ Davis, Beandrea. "The Elusive Concept of Blackness." ColorLines, November/December 2007. Accessed August 4, 2009.
  7. ^ Mahdawi, Arwa. "The truth about adverts: selling the White Woman™", The Guardian, April 29, 2015
  8. ^ Erdos, Elleree. "Hank Willis Thomas: Now You See It, Now You Don't," Art in Print Vol. 4 No. 2 (July–August 2014). For this work in the broader context of UV-reflective media and black radicalism, see Ensminger, David. "Black Light Panthers: The Politics of Fluorescence," Art in Print Vol. 5 No. 2 (July–August 2015).
  9. ^ "A New National Memorial To Victims Of Lynching - 1A". 1A. Retrieved 2018-05-02.
  10. ^ "Home". hankwillisthomas.com.
  11. ^ "Hank Willis Thomas: All Things Being Equal… receives NEA grant". 11 May 2018.
  12. ^ Cardwell, Erica (2020-10-02). "For Freedoms's Campaigns to Bring Creativity into Politics Are More Relevant than Ever". Artsy. Retrieved 2021-09-15.
  13. ^ a b Holson, Laura M. (November 14, 2018). "Rockwell's America, Reimagined". The New York Times.
  14. ^ "Rosario Dawson, van Jones, and Others Star in a 21st-Century Remake of Norman Rockwell's Famous "Four Freedoms" Series—See Them Here". 31 October 2018.
  15. ^ Lockwood, Devi (1 November 2019). "'The Writing on the Wall': Voices of the Incarcerated". The New York Times.
  16. ^ "Shining a Light on Life Behind Bars". The Marshall Project. 13 June 2020.
  17. ^ "In Search of the Truth | Cause Collective".
  18. ^ "Home". insearchofthetruth.net.
  19. ^ Randy Kennedy. Political Art in a Fractious Election Year "The New York Times", July 17, 2016
  20. ^ "Plagiarism or remixing? South African photographer accuses artist of theft". TheGuardian.com. 13 September 2018.
  21. ^ "U.S. Artist accused of stealing iconic images from South African photographers". CBS News.
  22. ^ "US artist sparks appropriation row for "stealing" famous South African pics". 19 October 2018.
  23. ^ "John Simon Guggenheim Foundation | Hank Willis Thomas". Retrieved 2020-11-23.
  24. ^ "Artforum.com". www.artforum.com. Retrieved 2020-11-23.
  25. ^ "Hank Willis Thomas". Artadia. 6 July 2016. Retrieved 2019-06-11.
  26. ^ "What's inside Montgomery's national peace and slave memorial museum opening April 26". 19 April 2018.
  27. ^ "Hank Willis Thomas to unveil public art made from loved one's last message". 8 November 2017.
  28. ^ . Miami Herald. Archived from the original on 2017-10-24.
  29. ^ "Hank Willis Thomas: All Things Being Equal…". Portland Art Museum. Retrieved 2019-11-26.
  30. ^ Editor (2009-12-31). "Shower of Kunst: The State of It". Shower of Kunst. Retrieved 2020-01-05. {{cite web}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  31. ^ a b Vecsey, George (2017-10-04). "Artist Sews Together Sports and Geopolitics (Published 2017)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2020-11-13.
  32. ^ "The Whitney Hires Marcela Guerrero and Rujeko Hockley as Assistant Curators". 24 January 2017.
  33. ^ a b c d e f Thomas, Hank Willis (2014). "Artist Statement". Callaloo. 37 (4): 957–960. doi:10.1353/cal.2014.0141. S2CID 201766118.
  34. ^ Tani, Ellen (2016-04-21). "How Kerry James Marshall Became a Superhero for Chicago's Housing Projects". Artsy. Retrieved 2021-04-13.

External links

  • Rosario Dawson, Van Jones, and Others Star in a 21st-Century Remake of Norman Rockwell's Famous ‘Four Freedoms’ Series—See Them Here
  • Hank Willis Thomas video interview on Unbranded series
  • Hank Willis Thomas in the collection of The Museum of Modern Art
  • Official Website of Hank Willis Thomas
  • Cause Collective, a group of artists of which Thomas is a member
  • An Evening with Hank Willis-Thomas, with quotes related to his themes, SRQdaily, 2018.03.23
  • Photo Eye: Interview
  • Wynwood: 30 Americans
  • Video of Hank Thomas at a joint lecture with his mother, Deborah Willis
  • Bishop, Philip E. Orlando Sentinel, April 19, 2007.
  • Cook, Greg. "Bought and Sold." The Boston Phoenix, January 22, 2008.
  • Cotter, Holland. "On the Piers, Testing the Waters in a Down Art Market." New York Times, March 5, 2009.
  • Dawson, Jessica. "'Black Panther Rank and File' Rallying Its Own Art Movement." Washington Post, November 23, 2007.
  • Rice, Robin. Philadelphia City Paper, January 23, 2008.
  • Of Time, Space and Revolution[permanent dead link], 2010, Baltimore Museum of Art.

hank, willis, thomas, born, 1976, plainfield, jersey, lives, works, brooklyn, american, conceptual, artist, working, primarily, with, themes, related, identity, history, popular, culture, born1976, plainfield, jersey, nationalityamericanalma, matermfa, califor. Hank Willis Thomas born 1976 in Plainfield New Jersey lives and works in Brooklyn NY is an American conceptual artist working primarily with themes related to identity history and popular culture 1 Hank Willis ThomasBorn1976 age 46 47 Plainfield New Jersey U S NationalityAmericanAlma materMFA MA California College of the Arts BFA Tisch School of the ArtsMovementConceptual artSpouseRujeko Hockley Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Collaborative projects 2 1 1 For Freedoms 2 1 2 The Writing On The Wall 2 1 3 Cause Collective 2 1 3 1 The Long March 2 1 3 2 In Search of the Truth The Truth Booth 2 1 3 3 Question Bridge Black Males 2 1 3 4 Monument Lab s citywide public art exhibition 2 2 Accusations of plagiarism 2 3 Selected images 3 Awards 4 Permanent installation 5 Selected exhibitions 5 1 Solo two person 6 Family 7 Inspiration 8 Bibliography 9 References 10 External linksEarly life and education EditHank Willis Thomas was born in 1976 in Plainfield New Jersey to Hank Thomas a jazz musician and Deborah Willis artist photographer curator and educator 2 Thomas attended Duke Ellington School of the Arts as a Museum Studies student 3 Thomas holds a B F A in Photography and Africana studies from New York University 1998 4 and an M A M F A in Photography and Visual Criticism from the California College of the Arts 2004 4 In 2017 he received honorary doctorates from the Maryland Institute College of Art and the Institute for Doctoral Studies in the Visual Arts Career EditHis work has been exhibited throughout the United States and abroad including the International Center of Photography New York Guggenheim Museum Bilbao Spain Musee du quai Branly Paris Hong Kong Arts Centre Hong Kong and the Witte de With Center for Contemporary Art Netherlands Thomas work is included in numerous public collections including the Museum of Modern Art New York Solomon R Guggenheim Museum New York Whitney Museum of American Art New York Brooklyn Museum New York High Museum of Art Atlanta and the National Gallery of Art Washington D C His collaborative projects include Question Bridge Black Males In Search Of The Truth The Truth Booth and For Freedoms which was awarded the 2017 ICP Infinity Award for New Media and Online Platform In 2012 Question Bridge Black Males debuted at the Sundance Film Festival and was selected for the New Media Grant from the Tribeca Film Institute Thomas is also the recipient of the Guggenheim Fellowship 2018 AGO Photography Prize 2017 Soros Equality Fellowship 2017 and is a member of the New York City Public Design Commission Thomas is represented by Jack Shainman Gallery New York Ben Brown Fine Arts London and Hong Kong Goodman Gallery South Africa and Marauni Mercier Belgium Thomas lives and works in Brooklyn NY Hank Willis Thomas collaborative projects have been featured at the Sundance Film Festival and installed publicly at the Oakland International Airport The Oakland Museum of California and the University of California San Francisco Thomas explores the representation of the African American male body in visual culture in his B r anded Series 5 6 Writing in The Guardian critic Arwa Mahdawi observed Thomas s work unbrands advertising stripping away the commercial context and leaving the exposed image to speak for itself 7 His two screenprints of 2013 And I Can t Run and Blow the Man Down express the erasure of past injustices to the black male body by printing photographs of humiliations or executions of black men on retro reflective vinyl commonly used for street signs rendering them invisible except under flash photography 8 Installation at the National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery Alabama Thomas has a permanent installation at The National Memorial for Peace and Justice in Montgomery Alabama The piece titled Rise Up depicts a cement wall with statues of black heads and bodies emerging from the top of the wall whose arms are raised in surrender The piece comments on the incidents of police violence and police brutality that are prevalent in current American society 9 In 2017 Thomas also unveiled his permanent public artwork Love Over Rules in San Francisco and All Power to All People in Opa Locka Florida Thomas has acted as a visiting professor at CCA and in the MFA programs at Maryland Institute College of Art and ICP Bard and has lectured at Yale University Princeton University the Birmingham Museum of Art and the Musee du Quai Branly in Paris Thomas is the winner of the first ever Aperture West Book Prize for his monograph Pitch Blackness November 2008 His work has been featured in other publications including Reflections in Black Norton 2000 and the exhibitions along with accompanying publications 25 under 25 Up and Coming American Photographers CDS 2003 and 30 Americans RFC 2008 10 Other major publications include Aperture s Hank Willis Thomas All Things Being Equal 2018 and Philadelphia Photo Arts Center PPAC s The Philly Block Project 2017 Thomas first comprehensive survey Hank Willis Thomas All Things Being Equal opened at the Portland Art Museum in fall 2019 and will travel to additional U S museums in 2020 The exhibition will highlight Thomas devotion to reframing perspectives on difficult issues central to American history and the representation of race and the politics of visual culture 11 Collaborative projects Edit For Freedoms Edit Founded in 2016 along with artist Eric Gottesman Michelle Woo and Wyatt Gallery 12 For Freedoms is an anti partisan platform for creative civic engagement discourse and direct action The name was inspired by American artist Norman Rockwell s paintings of Franklin D Roosevelt s Four Freedoms 1941 freedom of speech freedom of worship freedom from want and freedom from fear Through exhibitions installations and public programs the organization is established to deepen public discussions on civic issues and core values and to advocate for equality dialogue and civic participation In 2018 For Freedoms launched the 50 State Initiative the largest creative collaboration in U S history In the fall of 2018 For Freedoms launched a major billboard campaign in every state including Washington D C and Puerto Rico The campaign included over 150 contemporary artists including Marilyn Minter Rashid Johnson Guerrilla Girls and Theaster Gates among others In October 2018 For Freedoms also launched a photo campaign entitled Four Freedoms In collaboration with photographers Emily Shur and Wyatt Gallery Thomas and For Freedoms transformed Norman Rockwell s depictions of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt s 1941 address to Congress which articulated FDR s vision of the four basic human freedoms 13 Thomas wrote that The image haunted me because of the world we live in I wanted to imagine what it would look like today 13 Through dozens of iterations of Rockwell s original four paintings the 82 images in the campaign attempted to reflect the immeasurable diversity of American identities today Celebrities such as Rosario Dawson Dolores Huerta Gina Belafonte Van Jones Jesse Williams Robert A Nakamura and Karen L Ishizuka Kiran Gandhi Michael Ealy Saul Williams Rodney Barnette and others were included in the reinterpretations The new version of the images were widely shared on social media and Instagram including by celebrities such as Alicia Keys and Jada Pinkett Smith 14 The Writing On The Wall Edit Together with American academic cultural critic and activist Baz Dreisinger Thomas and Dreisinger s organization Incarceration Nations Network have collaborated to create the traveling exhibition and installation The Writing On The Wall TWOTW constructed from over 2 000 pages of writing and art by incarcerated and formerly incarcerated people across the world 15 TWOTW was first displayed on New York City s High Line in November 2019 and throughout the COVID 19 pandemic the collaborators have adapted the content to be projected onto city buildings and landscapes including jails and courthouses first in New York then in Washington D C and Ohio The installation s first international showing was in Mexico City in late June 16 Cause Collective Edit The Cause Collective is a team of artists designers and ethnographers creating innovative art in the public realm Their projects explore and enliven public spaces by creating a dynamic conversation between issues sites and the public audience By exploring ideas that affect and shape society the collective seeks to add the public back into public space and art The Long March Edit The Long March is a 27 monitor installation commissioned by the recently renovated Birmingham Shuttlesworth International Airport The installation incorporates depictions of movement migration and marching from different eras in Alabama history for instance the Civil War the Children s March the Selma Marches football marching bands the railroad and migrations to the Magic City The long row of monitors the long march track to the center of the wall and meld into a kaleidoscope The kaleidoscope is tiled in the shape of a Camellia the Alabama state flower The Camellia in this instance is a repository of past and present motion that represents the flowering that grows out of movement The kaleidoscopic mixes and melds the long march footage creating new emergent patterns forms and colors The travelers who will encounter the piece will be able to envision themselves as part of this mosaic that is symbolized through Alabama s relationship to the march as a form of historical progression In Search of the Truth The Truth Booth Edit The collaborative traveling artwork is sited in front of the Edmund Pettus Bridge in Selma Alabama September 2018 Thomas is working on the long term and global public art project In Search of the Truth The Truth Booth Also known as The Truth Booth it is in collaboration with Ryan Alexiev Jim Ricks and Will Sylvester all members of Cause Collective a team of artists designers and ethnographers creating innovative art in the public realm 17 18 The New York Times writes The Truth Booth is a roving inflatable creation by a group of artists calling itself the Cause Collective The booth in the shape of a cartoon word bubble with TRUTH in bold letters on its side serves as a video confessional Visitors are asked to sit inside and finish the politically and metaphysically loaded sentence that begins The truth is 19 To date the project has travelled Ireland Afghanistan South Africa Australia the United States and Mexico It embarked on a world tour at the Galway Arts Festival Ireland in 2011 It debuted in the US during the LOOK3 Festival of the Photograph in Charlottesville VA in June 2012 Throughout this long term project the video footage is compiled and edited into a video artwork To expand and engage with audiences the movements of The Truth Booth and sample responses are tracked edited and categorized on a website Ultimately the goal of this project is to try to capture as many definitions confessions and thoughts on The Truth as possible creating a diverse portrait of people across the globe It was first supported by the Arts Council of Ireland and the San Francisco Foundation Question Bridge Black Males Edit In collaboration with artists Chris Johnson Bayete Ross Smith and Kamal Sinclair Question Bridge Black Males is a platform for black men of all ages and backgrounds to ask and candidly respond to questions that are rarely discussed in public Through video mediated question and answer exchange diverse members of this demographic bridge economic political geographic and generational divisions The Question Bridge campaign seeks to represent and redefine Black male identity in America Additional collaborators include Jesse Williams Delroy Lindo and Dr Deborah Willis Monument Lab s citywide public art exhibition Edit From September 14 to November 10 2017 Monument Lab began a citywide public art exhibition throughout ten Philadelphia squares and parks in collaboration with the Mural Arts Program Hank Willis Thomas installed a sculpture entitled All Power to all people which consisted of an afro pick standing eight feet tall near Philadelphia city hall Accusations of plagiarism Edit In 2018 Thomas was accused of plagiarism by South African photographer Graeme Williams 20 A photograph that Williams took in 1990 of black children in the foreground and white policemen in the background was modified by Thomas removing colour from the background The photograph was exhibited at the Johannesburg Art Fair with an asking price of US 36000 without attribution or mention of Williams Thomas defended himself saying that what he had done was akin to sampling remixing In a separate case South African photographer Peter Magubane who has photo documented life in South Africa for six decades discovered that Thomas had also altered one of his photos similarly putting a white fade over the background without seeking permission from Magubane Thomas defended his actions saying that asking permission to use the photograph was a form of censorship Magubane responded that Thomas actions was arrogant shameful and disrespectful 21 22 Selected images Edit Awards Edit2018 Guggenheim Fellowship John Simon Guggenheim Foundation 23 Art For Justice Fund Grant Ford Foundation 24 2017 Soros Equality Fellowship Open Society Foundations2007 Artadia Award 25 Renew Media Arts Fellowship Rockefeller FoundationPermanent installation EditUnity Public sculpture Brooklyn NY 2019 Raise Up Permanent Installation Equal Justice Initiative s National Memorial for Peace and Justice Montgomery AL Unveiled April 26 2018 26 Love Over Rules Permanent Installation Sites Unseen San Francisco CA Unveiled November 9 2017 27 All Power to All People Permanent Installation Opa locka Art Opa locka FL Unveiled October 17 2017 28 Selected exhibitions EditThis section of a biography of a living person does not include any references or sources Please help by adding reliable sources Contentious material about living people that is unsourced or poorly sourced must be removed immediately Find sources Hank Willis Thomas news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message This biographical article is written like a resume Please help improve it by revising it to be neutral and encyclopedic October 2018 Solo two person Edit 2019 Hank Willis Thomas All Things Being Equal Portland Art Museum Portland OR 29 2018 Black Survival Guide or How to Live Through a Police Riot Delaware Art Museum Wilmington DE Branded Unbranded The John and Mable Ringling Museum of Art Sarasota FL2017 Flying Geese Mississippi Museum of Art Jackson MS Freedom Isn t Always Beautiful and Blind Memory SCAD Museum of Art Savannah Georgia Unbranded A Century of White Women 1915 2015 York College Galleries York Pennsylvania Hank Willis Thomas Black Righteous Space California African American Museum Los Angeles CA2016 Evidence of Things Not Seen Kadist San Francisco California Unbranded A Century of White Women 1915 2015 Weatherspoon Art Museum Greensboro North Carolina2015 The Truth is I See You PublicArtFund Metrotech Brooklyn New York In The Box Hank Willis Thomas Chrysler Museum of Art Norfolk Virginia2014 History Doesn t Laugh Goodman Gallery Johannesburg South Africa Question Bridge Black Males DuSable Museum of African American History Chicago Illinois2013 Hank Willis Thomas The Cleveland Museum of Art and the Transformer Station Cleveland Ohio Wayfarer Picture Windows Series International Center of Photography New York New York2012 Hank Willis Thomas Believe It SCAD Galleries La Galerie Pfriem Lacoste2011 Strange Fruit Corcoran Gallery of Art Washington D C 2010 All Things Being Equal Goodman Gallery Cape Town South Africa2009 Hank Willis Thomas Baltimore Museum of Art Baltimore Maryland Light Text Nerman Museum of Contemporary Art Kansas City KS Digging Deeper in collaboration with Willie Cole Wadsworth Atheneum Museum of Art Hartford Connecticut About Time Galway 126 Artist run Gallery Galway Ireland 30 Black is Beautiful Roberts and Tilton Gallery Los Angeles CA Pitch Blackness Jack Shainman Gallery New York NY2008 Winter In America de Saisset Museum Santa Clara CA2005 Bearing Witness African American Museum in Philadelphia Philadelphia PAFamily EditThomas s mother Deborah Willis Ph D is an art photographer and an NYU professor His father also Hank Thomas is a jazz musician film producer physicist and a member of the Black Panther Party 31 Thomas is married to Rujeko Hockley assistant curator at the Whitney Museum of American Art 32 31 Inspiration EditBorn in 1976 Thomas was amazed that less than ten years before he was born people were still fighting to affirm their humanity 33 Inspired by the 1968 Memphis Sanitation Workers s slogan I am a man Thomas became interested in exploring how many different ways that phrase could be read 33 Thomas s work focuses on framing and context 33 He explores ideas about how history and culture are framed who does the framing and how this affects our interpretation of reality 33 In his work he focuses on speaking about popular culture and does so by using a variety of different mediums 33 He specifically likes to use photography because of the way you can edit a photograph which can be a way of retelling history 33 Thomas has also stated that the artist Kerry James Marshall was a big influence on him and his work 34 Bibliography EditWillis Deborah Hank Willis Thomas and Kalia Brooks Progeny Deborah Willis and Hank Willis Thomas New York Miriam and Ira D Wallach Art Gallery Columbia University 2009 ISBN 978 1 884919 23 7 Thomas Hank Willis Rene De Guzman and Robin D G Kelley Pitch Blackness New York Aperture 2008 ISBN 978 1 59711 072 3 Harney Elizabeth editor Flava Wedge Curatorial Projects 1997 2007 Toronto Wedge Curatorial Projects 2008 Page 131 ISBN 978 0 9783370 0 1 Rhoden William C Forty Million Dollar Slaves The Rise Fall and Redemption of the Black Athlete New York Crown Publishers 2006 Page 182 ISBN 0 609 60120 2 Thomas Hank Willis Kambui Olujimi and Carla Williams Winter in America San Francisco 81 Press 2006 ISBN 0 9777336 0 2 Armstrong Elizabeth Rita Gonzalez and Karen Moss California Biennial 2006 Newport Beach California Orange County Museum of Art 2006 Pages 152 5 ISBN 0 917493 42 7 Murray D C Hank Willis Thomas at Lisa Dent Art in America December 2006 p 165 Dawsey Jill Hank Willis Thomas Artforum com March 2006 Golden Thelma and Christine Y Kim Frequency New York Studio Museum in Harlem 2005 Pages 7 88 89 ISBN 0 942949 30 7 Bing Alison Image Consciousness SFGate com 28 October 2004 p 78 Willis Deborah Black a Celebration of a Culture Irvington New York Hylas Publishing 2004 Pages 221 230 290 ISBN 1 59258 051 3 Addo Ping Ann Pieces of Cloth Pieces of Culture Tapa from Tonga amp the Pacific Islands Oakland California Center for Art and Public Life California College of the Arts 2004 Hill Iris Tillman 25 Under 25 Up and Coming American Photographers Brooklyn New York powerHouse Books in association with the Center for Documentary Studies 2003 ISBN 1 57687 192 4 Gore Al and Tipper Gore The Spirit of Family New York Henry Holt 2002 Pages 14 5 ISBN 0 8050 6894 5 M I L K Project Friendship a Celebration of Humanity New York New York Morrow 2001 ISBN 0 06 620970 6 Willis Deborah Reflections in Black a History of Black Photographers 1840 to the Present New York W W Norton 2000 Pages 257 8 277 ISBN 0 393 04880 2 Carroll Rebecca Sugar in the Raw Voices of Young Black Girls in America New York Crown Trade Paperbacks 1997 Cover ISBN 0 517 88497 6 Cottman Michael H Deborah Willis and Linda Tarrant Reid The Family of Black America New York Crown Trade Paperbacks 1996 Pages 122 6 ISBN 0 517 88822 X Cottman Michael H and Deborah Willis Million Man March New York Crown Trade Paperbacks 1995 Pages 13 39 81 ISBN 0 517 88763 0References Edit Hank Willis Thomas Jack Shainman Gallery www jackshainman com Retrieved 2019 01 31 The HistoryMakers Deborah Willis biography ArtMakers June 27 2007 Accessed August 1 2009 Duke Ellington School of the Arts a b Hank Willis Thomas Beth Schiffer Creative Darkroom Archived from the original on 2016 10 13 Retrieved 2016 04 07 Dutra Robyn The New Regime Hank Willis Thomas Black Book December 4 2008 Accessed August 4 2009 Davis Beandrea The Elusive Concept of Blackness ColorLines November December 2007 Accessed August 4 2009 Mahdawi Arwa The truth about adverts selling the White Woman The Guardian April 29 2015 Erdos Elleree Hank Willis Thomas Now You See It Now You Don t Art in Print Vol 4 No 2 July August 2014 For this work in the broader context of UV reflective media and black radicalism see Ensminger David Black Light Panthers The Politics of Fluorescence Art in Print Vol 5 No 2 July August 2015 A New National Memorial To Victims Of Lynching 1A 1A Retrieved 2018 05 02 Home hankwillisthomas com Hank Willis Thomas All Things Being Equal receives NEA grant 11 May 2018 Cardwell Erica 2020 10 02 For Freedoms s Campaigns to Bring Creativity into Politics Are More Relevant than Ever Artsy Retrieved 2021 09 15 a b Holson Laura M November 14 2018 Rockwell s America Reimagined The New York Times Rosario Dawson van Jones and Others Star in a 21st Century Remake of Norman Rockwell s Famous Four Freedoms Series See Them Here 31 October 2018 Lockwood Devi 1 November 2019 The Writing on the Wall Voices of the Incarcerated The New York Times Shining a Light on Life Behind Bars The Marshall Project 13 June 2020 In Search of the Truth Cause Collective Home insearchofthetruth net Randy Kennedy Political Art in a Fractious Election Year The New York Times July 17 2016 Plagiarism or remixing South African photographer accuses artist of theft TheGuardian com 13 September 2018 U S Artist accused of stealing iconic images from South African photographers CBS News US artist sparks appropriation row for stealing famous South African pics 19 October 2018 John Simon Guggenheim Foundation Hank Willis Thomas Retrieved 2020 11 23 Artforum com www artforum com Retrieved 2020 11 23 Hank Willis Thomas Artadia 6 July 2016 Retrieved 2019 06 11 What s inside Montgomery s national peace and slave memorial museum opening April 26 19 April 2018 Hank Willis Thomas to unveil public art made from loved one s last message 8 November 2017 Opa locka residents cheer the power of art and all people Miami Herald Miami Herald Archived from the original on 2017 10 24 Hank Willis Thomas All Things Being Equal Portland Art Museum Retrieved 2019 11 26 Editor 2009 12 31 Shower of Kunst The State of It Shower of Kunst Retrieved 2020 01 05 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a last has generic name help a b Vecsey George 2017 10 04 Artist Sews Together Sports and Geopolitics Published 2017 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2020 11 13 The Whitney Hires Marcela Guerrero and Rujeko Hockley as Assistant Curators 24 January 2017 a b c d e f Thomas Hank Willis 2014 Artist Statement Callaloo 37 4 957 960 doi 10 1353 cal 2014 0141 S2CID 201766118 Tani Ellen 2016 04 21 How Kerry James Marshall Became a Superhero for Chicago s Housing Projects Artsy Retrieved 2021 04 13 External links EditRosario Dawson Van Jones and Others Star in a 21st Century Remake of Norman Rockwell s Famous Four Freedoms Series See Them Here Hank Willis Thomas video interview on Unbranded series Hank Willis Thomas in the collection of The Museum of Modern Art Official Website of Hank Willis Thomas Pitch Blackness Thomas first book Cause Collective a group of artists of which Thomas is a member Flypmedia Visual Slang An Evening with Hank Willis Thomas with quotes related to his themes SRQdaily 2018 03 23 Photo Eye Interview Wynwood 30 Americans Video of Hank Thomas at a joint lecture with his mother Deborah Willis Bishop Philip E Exhibit Explores History Hipness Orlando Sentinel April 19 2007 Cook Greg Bought and Sold The Boston Phoenix January 22 2008 Cotter Holland On the Piers Testing the Waters in a Down Art Market New York Times March 5 2009 Dawson Jessica Black Panther Rank and File Rallying Its Own Art Movement Washington Post November 23 2007 Rice Robin Life in Turnabout Philadelphia City Paper January 23 2008 Of Time Space and Revolution permanent dead link 2010 Baltimore Museum of Art Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hank Willis Thomas amp oldid 1130991052, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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