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Wikipedia

Kara Walker

Kara Elizabeth Walker (born November 26, 1969) is an American contemporary painter, silhouettist, print-maker, installation artist, filmmaker, and professor who explores race, gender, sexuality, violence, and identity in her work. She is best known for her room-size tableaux of black cut-paper silhouettes. Walker was awarded a MacArthur fellowship in 1997, at the age of 28, becoming one of the youngest ever recipients of the award.[2] She has been the Tepper Chair in Visual Arts at the Mason Gross School of the Arts, Rutgers University since 2015.[3]

Kara Walker
Walker in 2013
Born (1969-11-26) November 26, 1969 (age 54)
NationalityAmerican
Notable workDarkytown Rebellion,[1] no place (like home), A Subtlety
Parent
AwardsMacArthur fellowship
Websitekarawalkerstudio.com

Walker is regarded as among the most prominent and acclaimed Black American artists working today.[4][5][6][7]

Early life and education edit

Walker was born in 1969 in Stockton, California.[8] Her father, Larry Walker, was a painter and professor.[8][9][10] Her mother Gwendolyn was an administrative assistant.[11][12] A 2007 review in the New York Times described her early life as calm, noting that "nothing about [Walker's] very early life would seem to have predestined her for this task. Born in 1969, she grew up in an integrated California suburb, part of a generation for whom the uplift and fervor of the civil rights movement and the want-it-now anger of Black Power were yesterday's news."[13]

When Walker was 13, her father accepted a position at Georgia State University. They settled in the city of Stone Mountain.[14][11] The move was a culture shock for the young artist. In sharp contrast with the multi-cultural environment of coastal California, Stone Mountain still held Ku Klux Klan rallies. At her new high school, Walker recalls, "I was called a 'nigger,' told I looked like a monkey, accused (I didn't know it was an accusation) of being a 'Yankee.'" [15]

Walker received her BFA from the Atlanta College of Art in 1991 and her MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1994.[16] Walker found herself uncomfortable and afraid to address race within her art during her early college years, worrying it would be received as "typical" or "obvious"; however, she began introducing race into her art while attending Rhode Island School of Design for her Master's.

Walker recalls reflecting on her father's influence: "One of my earliest memories involves sitting on my dad's lap in his studio in the garage of our house and watching him draw. I remember thinking: 'I want to do that, too,' and I pretty much decided then and there at age 2½ or 3 that I was an artist just like Dad."[17]

Work and career edit

Walker is best known for her panoramic friezes of cut-paper silhouettes, usually black figures against a white wall, which address the history of American slavery and racism through violent and unsettling imagery.[18] She has also produced works in gouache, watercolor, video animation, shadow puppets, "magic-lantern" projections, as well as large-scale sculptural installations like her ambitious public exhibition with Creative Time called "A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby, an Homage to the unpaid and overworked Artisans who have refined our Sweet tastes from the cane fields to the Kitchens of the New World on the Occasion of the demolition of the Domino Sugar Refining Plant" (2014). The black and white silhouettes confront the realities of history while also using the stereotypes from the era of slavery to relate to persistent modern-day concerns.[19]

 
Visitors at Walker's A Subtlety. The white sculpture depicting a woman in the shape of a sphinx is visible in the background.

She first came to the art world's attention in 1994 with her mural "Gone, An Historical Romance of a Civil War as It Occurred Between the Dusky Thighs of One Young Negress and Her Heart." This cut-paper silhouette mural, presenting an Antebellum south filled with sex and slavery, was an instant hit.[20] At the age of 28, she became the second youngest recipient of the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation's "genius" grant,[21] second only to renowned Mayanist David Stuart. In 2007, the Walker Art Center exhibition "Kara Walker: My Complement, My Oppressor, My Enemy, My Love" was the artist's first full-scale US museum survey.

Her influences include Andy Warhol, whose art Walker says she admired as a child,[12] Adrian Piper,[22][23] and Robert Colescott.[20]

Walker's silhouette images work to bridge unfinished folklore in the Antebellum South, raising identity and gender issues for African-American women in particular. Walker uses images from historical textbooks to show how enslaved African Americans were depicted during Antebellum South.[12] The silhouette was typically a genteel tradition in American art history; it was often used for family portraits and book illustrations. Walker carried on this portrait tradition but used them to create characters in a nightmarish world, a world that reveals the brutality of American racism and inequality.

Walker incorporates ominous, sharp fragments of the South's landscape, such as Spanish moss trees and a giant moon obscured by dramatic clouds. These images surround the viewer and create a circular, claustrophobic space. This circular format paid homage to another art form, the 360-degree historical painting known as the cyclorama.[19]

Some of her images are grotesque; for example, in "The Battle of Atlanta," [24] a white man, presumably a Southern soldier, is raping a black girl while her brother watches in shock; a white child is about to insert his sword into a nearly-lynched black woman's vagina; and a male black slave rains tears all over an adolescent white boy. The use of physical stereotypes such as flatter profiles, bigger lips, straighter nose, and longer hair helps the viewer immediately distinguish the black subjects from the white subjects. Walker depicts the inequalities and mistreatment of African Americans by their white counterparts. Viewers at the Studio Museum in Harlem looked sickly, shocked, and appalled upon seeing her exhibition. Thelma Golden, the museum's chief curator, said that "throughout her career, Walker has challenged and changed the way we look at and understand American history. Her work is provocative, emotionally wrenching, yet overwhelmingly beautiful and intellectually compelling."[25] Walker has said that her work addresses the way Americans look at racism with a "soft focus," avoiding "the confluence of disgust and desire and voluptuousness that are all wrapped up in [...] racism."[19]

In an interview with New York's Museum of Modern Art, Walker stated: "I guess there was a little bit of a slight rebellion, maybe a little bit of a renegade desire that made me realize at some point in my adolescence that I really liked pictures that told stories of things– genre paintings, historical paintings– the sort of derivatives we get in contemporary society."[10]

Notable works edit

In her piece created in 2000, "Insurrection! (Our Tools Were Rudimentary, Yet We Pressed On)", the silhouetted characters are against a background of colored light projections. This gives the piece a transparent quality, evocative of the production cels from the animated films of the 1930s. It also references the plantation story " Gone With the Wind" and the Technicolor film based on it. Also, the light projectors were set up so that the shadows of the viewers were cast on the wall, making them characters and encouraging them to assess the work's tough themes.[19] In 2005, she created the exhibit "8 Possible Beginnings" or: "The Creation of African-America, a Moving Picture," which introduced moving images and sound. This helped further immerse the viewers into her dark worlds. In this exhibit, the silhouettes are used as shadow puppets. Additionally, she uses the voice of herself and her daughter to suggest how the heritage of early American slavery has affected her image as an artist and woman of color.[19]

In response to Hurricane Katrina, Walker created "After the Deluge" since the hurricane had devastated many poor and black areas of New Orleans. Walker was bombarded with news images of "black corporeality." She likened these casualties to enslaved Africans piled onto ships for the Middle Passage, the Atlantic crossing to America.[12]

I was seeing images that were all too familiar. It was black people in a state of life-or-death desperation, and everything corporeal was coming to the surface: water, excrement, sewage. It was a re-inscription of all the stereotypes about the black body.[26]

Walker took part in the 2009 inaugural exhibition at Scaramouche Gallery in New York City with a group exhibit called "The Practice of Joy Before Death; It Just Wouldn't Be a Party Without You."[27] Recent works by Kara Walker include Frum Grace, Miss Pipi's Blue Tale (April–June 2011) at Lehmann Maupin, in collaboration with Sikkema Jenkins & Co. A concurrent exhibition, "Dust Jackets for the Niggerati- and Supporting Dissertations, Drawings submitted ruefully by Dr. Kara E. Walker," opened at Sikkema Jenkins on the same day.[28]

Walker created "Katastwóf Karavan" for the 2018 art festival "Prospect.4: The Lotus in Spite of the Swamp" in New Orleans. This sculpture was an old-timey wagon, with Walker's signature silhouettes portraying slaveholders and enslaved people making up the sides and a custom-built steam-powered calliope playing songs off "black protest and celebration."[29]

Although Walker is known for her serious exhibitions with an overall deep meaning behind her work, she admits relying on "humor and viewer interaction." Walker has stated, "I didn't want a completely passive viewer" and "I wanted to make work where the viewer wouldn't walk away; he would either giggle nervously, get pulled into history, into fiction, into something totally demeaning and possibly very beautiful."[30]

Commissions edit

In 2002, Walker created a site-specific installation, "An Abbreviated Emancipation (from a larger work: The Emancipation Approximation)," which was commissioned by The University of Michigan Museum of Art, Ann Arbor.[31] The work represented motifs and themes of race relations and their roots in the system of slavery before the Civil War.

In 2005, The New School unveiled Walker's first public art installation, a site-specific mural titled "Event Horizon," and placed along a grand stairway leading from the main lobby to a major public program space.[32]

In May 2014, Walker debuted her first sculpture, a monumental piece and public artwork entitled "A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby, an Homage to the unpaid and overworked Artisans who have refined our Sweet tastes from the cane fields to the Kitchens of the New World on the Occasion of the demolition of the Domino Sugar Refining Plant." The massive work was installed in the derelict Domino Sugar Refinery in Brooklyn and commissioned by Creative Time. The installation consisted of a female sphinx figure, measuring approximately 75 feet long by 35 feet high, preceded by an arrangement of fifteen life-size young male figures, dubbed attendants. The sphinx, which bore the head and features of the Mammy archetype, was made by covering a core of machine-cut blocks of polystyrene with 80 tons of white sugar donated by Domino Foods.[33] The fifteen male attendants were modeled after racist figurines that Walker purchased online. Five were made from solid sugar, and the other ten were resin sculptures coated in molasses. The fifteen attendants stood 60 inches tall and weighed 300-500 pounds each.[34][35] The factory and the artwork were demolished after the exhibition closed in July 2014, as had been previously planned.[14][36][37][38]

Walker has hinted that the whiteness of the sugar references its "aesthetic, clean, and pure quality." The slave trade is highlighted in the sculpture as well. Remarking on the overwhelmingly white audience at the exhibition in tandem with the political and historical content of the installation, art critic Jamilah King argued that "the exhibit itself is a striking and incredibly well-executed commentary on the historical relationship between race and capital, namely the money made off the backs of black slaves on sugar plantations throughout the Western Hemisphere. So the presence of so many white people -- and my presence as a black woman who's a descendant of slaves -- seemed to also be part of the show."[39] The work attracted over 130,000 visitors in its eight-weekend run. In his commentary on the sculpture, art historian Richard J. Powell wrote, "No matter how noble or celebratory in tone Walker's title for this work seemed, in this post-modern moment of moral skepticism and collective distrust, a work of art in a public arena—especially a visually perplexing nude—would be subjected to not just serious criticism, but Internet trolling and mockery."[40]

In 2016, Walker revealed "Slaughter of the Innocents (They Might be Guilty of Something)." In the painting, Walker depicts an African American woman slicing a baby with a small scythe. The influence for this detail was that of Margaret Garner, an enslaved person who killed her daughter to prevent her child from returning to slavery.

 
Fons Americanus at Tate Modern

In 2019, Walker created "Fons Americanus," the fifth annual Hyundai Commission at Tate Modern 's Turbine Hall.[41] The fountain, measuring up to 13 feet (4.0 m), contains allegorical motifs referencing the histories of Africa, America, and Europe, particularly pertaining to the Atlantic slave trade. In her review of Walker's "Fons Americanus" for Artnet News, Naomi Rea noted that "the piece is so loaded with art-historical and cultural references that you could teach an entire college history course without leaving Turbine Hall."[41] She also observed that – owing to the fountain's running water – the great work of art could be both seen and heard in the Turbine Hall.[41] The artwork is, at the same time, a sort of public monument inspired in part by the Victoria Memorial in front of Buckingham Palace. In 2019, acclaimed writer Zadie Smith observed something about public monuments that Walker interrogates in "Fons Americanus": "Monuments are complacent; they put a seal upon the past, they release us from dread. For Walker, dread is an engine: it prompts us to remember and rightly fear the ruins we shouldn't want to return to and don't wish to re-create—if we're wise."[42]

In 2023, the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art (SFMOMA) commissioned Walker to create the first site-specific installation for its Roberts Family Gallery.[43]

Other projects edit

For the season 1998/1999 in the Vienna State Opera, Walker designed a large-scale picture (176 m2) as part of the exhibition series "Safety Curtain," conceived by museum in progress.[44] In 2009, Walker curated volume 11 of Merge Records', Score!. Invited by fellow artist Mark Bradford in 2010 to develop a set of free lesson plans for K-12 teachers at the J. Paul Getty Museum, Walker offered a lesson that had students collaborating on a story by exchanging text messages.[45]

In March 2012, artist Clifford Owens performed a score by Walker at MoMA PS1.[46]

In 2013, Walker produced 16 lithographs for a limited edition, fine art printing of the libretto Porgy & Bess, by DuBose Heyward and Ira Gershwin, published by the Arion Press.

Controversy edit

 
" The Means to an End: A Shadow Drama in Five Acts," etching and aquatint by Kara Walker, five panels, 1995, Honolulu Museum of Art

The Detroit Institute of Art removed her "The Means to an End: A Shadow Drama in Five Acts" (1995) from a 1999 exhibition "Where the Girls Are: Prints by Women from the DIA's Collection" when African-American artists and collectors protested its presence. The five-panel silhouette of an antebellum plantation scene was in the permanent collection and was to be re-exhibited at some point according to a DIA spokesperson.[47]

A Walker piece entitled "The moral arc of history ideally bends towards justice but just as soon as not curves back around toward barbarism, sadism, and unrestrained chaos" caused controversy among employees at Newark Public Library who questioned its appropriateness for the reading room where it was hung. The artwork included depictions of the Ku Klux Klan accompanied by a burning cross, a naked black woman fellating a white man, and Barack Obama.[48] The piece was covered but not removed in December 2012.[49] After discussion among employees and trustees the work was again uncovered.[50] In March 2013 Walker visited the New Jersey Newark Public Library to discuss the work and the controversy. Walker discussed the content of the work, including racism, identity, and her use of "heroic" figures such as Obama. Walker asked, "[d]o these archetypes collapse history? They're supposed to expand the conversation, but they often collapse it."[48] Walker described the overwhelming subject matter of her works as a "too-muchness".[48]

In the 1999 PBS documentary "I'll Make Me a World," African-American artist Betye Saar criticized Walker's work for its "revolting and negative" depiction of black stereotypes and enslaved people. Saar accused the art of pandering to the enjoyment of "the white art establishment." In 1997 Saar emailed 200 fellow artists and politicians to voice her concerns about Walker's use of racist and sexist imagery and its positive reception in the art world.[51] This attention to Walker's practice led to a 1998 symposium at Harvard University, Change a Joke and Slip the Yoke: A Harvard University Conference on Racist Imagery, which discussed her work.[52]

Exhibitions edit

Walker's first museum survey,[53] in 2007, was organized by Philippe Vergne for the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis and traveled to the Whitney Museum in New York, the Hammer Museum[54] in Los Angeles, and the ARC/Musee d'Art Moderne de la ville de Paris.[55][14]

Solo exhibitions edit

  • 2007: "Kara Walker: My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love"[56]- Walker Art Center
  • 2013: "Kara Walker, Rise Up Ye Mighty Race!"[57]- The Art Institute of Chicago
  • 2013: We at the Camden Arts Centre are Exceedingly Proud to present an Exhibition of Capable Artworks by the Notable Hand of the Celebrated American, Kara Elizabeth Walker, Negress, Camden Art Centre, London[58] (toured to the MAC, Belfast in 2014[59])
  • 2014: "A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby, an Homage to the unpaid and overworked Artisans who have refined our Sweet tastes from the cane fields to the Kitchens of the New World on the Occasion of the demolition of the Domino Sugar Refining Plant," Creative Time, Brooklyn, NY.[36]
  • 2016: "The Ecstasy of St. Kara," Cleveland Museum of Art.[60][61]
  • 2017: "Sikkema Jenkins and Co. is Compelled to Present the Most Astounding And Important Painting Show of the Fall Art Show Viewing Season!", Sikkema Jenkins & Co., New York, NY.[62]
  • 2019: Untitled – Hyundai Commission, Tate Modern.[63]
  • 2021: "A Black Hole is Everything a Star Longs to Be," Kunstmuseum Basel, Switzerland[64]
  • 2021-21: Kara Walker: Cut to the Quick, Cincinnati Art Museum, Cincinnati, OH[65]
  • 2023: Kara Walker: Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War (Annotated), New york Historical Society Museum and Library, New York, NY[66]

Collections edit

Among the public collections holding work by Walker are the Minneapolis Institute of Art[67] and the Weisman Art Museum (Minneapolis, Minnesota);[68] the Tate Collection, London;[69] the Pérez Art Museum Miami,[70] the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles,[71] the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art (Madison, WI), the Menil Collection,[72] Houston;[73] and the Muscarelle Museum of Art, Williamsburg, Virginia.[74] Early large-scale cut-paper works have been collected by, among others, Jeffrey Deitch and Dakis Joannou.[75]

Recognition edit

In 1997, Walker, who was 28 at the time, was one of the youngest people to receive a MacArthur fellowship.[11] There was a lot of criticism[weasel words] because of her fame at such a young age and the fact that her art was most popular within the white community.[76] In 2007, Walker was listed among Time magazine's 100 Most Influential People in The World, Artists and Entertainers, in a citation written by fellow artist Barbara Kruger.[77] In 2012, she was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters.[78] She was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 2018.[79]

Walker has received the Deutsche Bank Prize[80] and the Larry Aldrich Award.[81] She was the United States representative for the 25th International São Paulo Biennial in Brazil (2002).[82] She is the 2005 Larry Aldrich Award recipient.[83] In 2016 completed a residency at the American Academy in Rome.[84]

Walker has been featured on PBS. Her work appears on the cover of musician Arto Lindsay 's recording, "Salt" (2004). In addition, she co-wrote the song "Suicide Demo for Kara Walker" on the Destroyer album "Kaputt."

Her name appears in the lyrics of the Le Tigre song "Hot Topic."[85]

In 2017, a large scale mural portrait of Kara Walker done by artist Chuck Close was installed in a New York City subway station (Q line, 86th Street), part of a MTA public arts program.[86]

In 2019 Walker was elected to the Royal Academy of Arts in London, as an Honorary Royal Academician (HonRA).[87]

Personal life edit

Early in her career, Walker lived in Providence, Rhode Island with her husband, German-born jewelry professor Klaus Bürgel,[88][89] whom she married in 1996. In 1997, she gave birth to a daughter.[90][84] The couple separated, and their divorce was finalized in 2010.[91][84] As of 2017, Walker is in a relationship with photographer and filmmaker Ari Marcopoulos.[84]

Walker moved to Fort Greene, Brooklyn in 2003 and has been a professor of visual arts in the MFA program at Columbia University since then. She maintained a studio in the Garment District, Manhattan from 2010 until 2017.[84] In May 2017, she moved her art practice to a studio in Industry City.[84] She also owns a country home in rural Massachusetts.[88]

In addition to her own practice, Walker served on the board of directors of the Foundation for Contemporary Arts (FCA) between 2011[92] and 2016.[93]

Further reading edit

Articles edit

  • D'Arcy, David. "Kara Walker Kicks Up a Storm," "Modern Painters" (April 2006).
  • Garrett, Shawn-Marie. "Return of the Repressed," "Theater" 32, no. 2 (Summer 2002).
  • Kazanjian, Dodie. "Cut it Out," "Vogue" (May 2005).
  • Szabo, Julia. "Kara Walker's Shock Art," "New York Times Magazine" 146, no. 50740 (March 1997).
  • Walker, Hamza. "Kara Walker: Cut it Out," "Nka: Journal of Contemporary African Art" no. 11/12 (Fall/Winter 2000).
  • Als, Hilton. "The Shadow Act," "The New Yorker", October 8, 2007
  • Als, Hilton. "The Sugar Sphinx," "The New Yorker", May 8, 2014
  • Scott, Andrea K. "Kara Walker's Ghosts of Future Evil", the "New Yorker", September 9, 2017
  • Wall, David. "Transgression, Excess, and the Violence of Looking in the Art of Kara Walker," "Oxford Art Journal" vol. 33, no. 3 (2010). https://www.jstor.org/stable/40983288

Non-fiction books and catalogues edit

Web sources edit

  • The Art Story: Kara Walker, Modern Art Insight. 2016

Notes edit

  1. ^ Bravo, Doris Maria-Reina, "Kara Walker, Darkytown Rebellion", Khan Academy.
  2. ^ Green, Adrienne (March 3, 2018). "How Kara Walker Recasts Racism's Bitter Legacy". The Atlantic. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  3. ^ Intrabartola, Lisa (September 25, 2015). "Esteemed Artist Kara Walker Named Tepper Chair". www.rutgers.edu.
  4. ^ Mzezewa, Tariro (September 14, 2017). "Opinion | Kara Walker Is Tired of Talking. But Her Canvases Scream". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  5. ^ Smee, Sebastian (February 9, 2021). "Perspective | The bright light shining on America's best Black artists has a fascinating backstory". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  6. ^ Sutton, Benjamin (August 30, 2017). "Dear Kara Walker: If You're Tired of Standing Up, Please Sit Down". Hyperallergic. Retrieved February 16, 2022.
  7. ^ Musser, Amber Jamilla (September 1, 2016). "Queering Sugar: Kara Walker's Sugar Sphinx and the Intractability of Black Female Sexuality". Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 42 (1): 153–174. doi:10.1086/686756. ISSN 0097-9740. S2CID 151909296.
  8. ^ a b Shaw, Gwendolyn DuBois (2004). Speaking the Unspeakable: The Art of Kara Walker. Duke University Press. p. 12. ISBN 0-8223-3396-1.
  9. ^ Belkove, Julie L. (March 2007). . www.wmagazine.com. Condé Nast. Archived from the original on February 7, 2016. Retrieved February 6, 2016.
  10. ^ a b "Kara Walker". Biography. Retrieved March 30, 2017.
  11. ^ a b c Als, Hilton (October 8, 2007), "The Shadow Act", The New Yorker.
  12. ^ a b c d . Archived from the original on September 14, 2011. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  13. ^ Cotter, Holland (October 12, 2007). "Black and White, but Never Simple". The New York Times.
  14. ^ a b c Gopnik, Blake (April 25, 2014). "Rarely One for Sugarcoating Kara Walker Creates a Confection at the Domino Refinery". The New York Times. Retrieved February 6, 2016.
  15. ^ "Kara Walker American Artist". The Art Story Foundation. Retrieved April 20, 2017.
  16. ^ . Walker Art Center. Archived from the original on March 8, 2012. Retrieved March 13, 2012.
  17. ^ Wilson, Flo, "On Walls and the Walkers," "The International Review of African American Art" 20.3: 17–19.
  18. ^ Kara Walker May 25, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York.
  19. ^ a b c d e Finger, Brad (2011). 50 Contemporary Artists You Should Know. Germany: Prestel Verlag. p. 143. ISBN 978-3-7913-4530-7.
  20. ^ a b Cotter, Holland. "Kara Walker." "The New York Times," n.d.
  21. ^ "MacArthur Fellows/Meet the Class of 1997". www.macfound.org. Retrieved February 13, 2017.
  22. ^ Cotter, Holland (October 12, 2007). "Kara Walker - Kara Walker: My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love Whitney Museum of American Art - Art - Review". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  23. ^ "MoMA | Projects | 1999 | Conversations | Kara Walker". www.moma.org. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  24. ^ Sikkema Jenkins & Co.—Kara Walker
  25. ^ Trotman, Krishan (July 2003). . New York Amsterdam News. Archived from the original on October 20, 2014. Retrieved March 7, 2015.
  26. ^ David D'Arcy (April 2006). "The Eyes of the Storm: Kara Walker on Hurricanes, Heroes and Villains". Modern Painters. Retrieved April 22, 2008.
  27. ^ info(at)scaramoucheart(dot)com, Scaramouche NY. "The Practice of Joy Before Death | Scaramouche Gallery". www.scaramoucheart.com. Retrieved May 17, 2022.
  28. ^ . Archived from the original on September 6, 2011. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  29. ^ Loos, Ted (February 21, 2018). "After a Blowup, Kara Walker Lets Off Steam in New Orleans (Published 2018)". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved November 20, 2020.
  30. ^ "Kara Walker – 53 Artworks, Bio & Shows on Artsy". www.artsy.net. Retrieved February 13, 2016.
  31. ^ Kara Walker Pictures From Another Time, published in conjunction with the exhibition "Kara Walker: An Abbreviated Emancipation (from The Emancipation Approximation)"
  32. ^ "New School University Unveils 'Event Horizon' the First Major Public Art Commission by Artist Kara Walker". Press release of April 26, 2005.
  33. ^ "CreativeTime Presents Kara Walker". Creative Time, Inc. Retrieved April 20, 2017.
  34. ^ "Kara Walker - A Subtlety or the Marvelous Sugar Baby". Artsy. June 17, 2014. Retrieved February 13, 2016.
  35. ^ "How Kara Walker Built A 75-Foot-Long Candy Sphinx In The Abandoned Domino Sugar Factory". www.vice.com. May 8, 2014. Retrieved May 17, 2022.
  36. ^ a b Creative Time Projects. Kara Walker.
  37. ^ "A Sonorous Subtlety: KARA WALKER with Kara Rooney", Brooklyn Rail, May 6, 2014.
  38. ^ Walker: "A Subtlety, or the Marvelous Sugar Baby" on YouTube.
  39. ^ King, Jamilah (May 21, 2014). "The Overwhelming Whiteness of Black Art".
  40. ^ Powell, Richard J (2020). Going there Black visual satire. Yale University Press. p. 147. ISBN 978-0-300-24574-5. OCLC 1226601331.
  41. ^ a b c Rea, Naomi (September 30, 2019). "Do You Find Europe's Grand Public Fountains Charming? Kara Walker's Spectacular Turbine Hall Commission May Change That". artnet news. Retrieved March 28, 2020.
  42. ^ Smith, Zadie. "What Do We Want History to Do to Us?". The New York Review of Books. Retrieved March 28, 2020.
  43. ^ Francesca Aton (26 May 2023), Kara Walker Receives Major Commission from SFMOMA ARTnews.
  44. ^ "Safety Curtain 1998/1999", museum in progress, Vienna.
  45. ^ Jori Finkel (June 17, 2010), Mark Bradford leads Kara Walker, Cathy Opie and more to create online teacher resource for Getty, "Los Angeles Times."
  46. ^ Rozalia Jovanovic. "Clifford Owens and Kara Walker at MoMA PS1: An Epilogue With RoseLee Goldberg", "Observer," March 15, 2012.
  47. ^ . Archived from the original on February 22, 2014. Retrieved June 21, 2013., http://faculty.risd.edu/bcampbel/dubois-Censoreship.pdf [sic]
  48. ^ a b c Kramer, Jessica (March 13, 2013). "Kara Walker Addresses Art and Controversy at the Newark Public Library". HuffPost. Retrieved April 26, 2014.
  49. ^ Carter, Barry (December 2, 2012). "Censorship or common decency? Newark Library covers up controversial artwork". The Star-Ledger. Retrieved January 19, 2012.
  50. ^ Carter, Barry (January 20, 2013). "Controversial painting in Newark Library is bared once again". The Star-Ledger. Retrieved January 20, 2012.
  51. ^ Hunter, Drohojowska-philp (October 31, 1999). "Art & Architecture; Reframing a black experience; Kara Walker's images Stir Devte in the African American Community on Whether they Enlighten or Degrade". Los Angeles Times. Newspaper. ProQuest 421566885.[dead link]
  52. ^ Mary Chou. Walker, Kara. "The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art," Vol. 5, pp. 139–140.
  53. ^ "Kara Walker: My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love". walkerart.org. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
  54. ^ "Home - Hammer Museum". The Hammer Museum. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
  55. ^ agence, GAYA - La nouvelle. "City of Paris Museum of Modern Art |". www.mam.paris.fr. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
  56. ^ "Kara Walker: My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love". walkerart.org. Retrieved March 21, 2023.
  57. ^ "Kara Walker, Rise Up Ye Mighty Race!". The Art Institute of Chicago. February 21, 2013. Retrieved March 21, 2023.
  58. ^ "Archive - Camden Arts Centre". archive.camdenartscentre.org. Retrieved March 30, 2020.
  59. ^ "Kara Walker | Art Exhibitions | The MAC Belfast". themaclive.com. Retrieved March 30, 2020.
  60. ^ Seals, Tyra A. (2016). "Exhibition: The Ecstasy of St. Kara".
  61. ^ Elizabeth, Walker, Kara (2016). The ecstasy of St. Kara. Smith, Tracy K.,, Griswold, William,, Thüring, Reto,, Rutland, Beau,, Lansdowne, John (Art historian), Cleveland Museum of Art. Cleveland, OH. ISBN 9780300227154. OCLC 959417933.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  62. ^ Pinckney, Darryl, "Black Lives Matter" (on "Kara Walker: Sikkema Jenkins and Co. is Compelled to present The most Astounding and Important Painting show of the fall Art Show viewing season!"), "New York Review of Books," November 9, 2017.
  63. ^ Tate. "Hyundai Commission: Kara Walker – Exhibition at Tate Modern". Tate. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  64. ^ Tate. "KARA WALKER. A BLACK HOLE IS EVERYTHING A STAR LONGS TO BE". museenbasel (in German). Retrieved August 18, 2021.
  65. ^ "Cincinnati Art Museum: Kara Walker: Cut to the Quick, From the Collections of Jordan D. Schnitzer and His Family Foundation". Cincinnati Art Museum. Retrieved March 17, 2023.
  66. ^ "Kara Walker: Harper's Pictorial History of the Civil War (Annotated)". www.nyhistory.org. Retrieved March 17, 2023.
  67. ^ Walker, Kara (January 24, 2017). "African-American". Minneapolis Institute of Art.
  68. ^ Kara Walker in AskArt.com
  69. ^ "Kara Walker Collection". tate. Retrieved March 4, 2016.
  70. ^ "Securing a Motherland Should Have Been Sufficient • Pérez Art Museum Miami". Pérez Art Museum Miami. Retrieved August 16, 2023.
  71. ^ . Archived from the original on March 8, 2012. Retrieved March 25, 2012.
  72. ^ "Home - The Menil Collection". The Menil Collection. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
  73. ^ "Kara Walker, American, born 1969 - Freedom Fighters for the Society of Forgotten Knowledge, Northern Domestic Scene - The Menil Collection - The Menil Collection". The Menil Collection. Retrieved March 18, 2016.
  74. ^ "You Cannot Win, (Ink wash and graphite on white wove paper)". Curators at Work III. Muscarelle Museum of Art. 2013. Retrieved June 26, 2018.[permanent dead link]
  75. ^ Julia Szabo (March 23, 1997), "Kara Walker's Shock Art", New York Times Magazine.
  76. ^ Solange James (January 24, 2008). "Art Critique: Kara Walker". Copious Magazine.
  77. ^ Barbara Kruger (2007). Time. Retrieved July 26, 2007.
  78. ^ Visual Arts Faculty Kara Walker Inducted into The American Academy of Arts and Letters February 26, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Columbia University School of the Arts, March 20, 2012.
  79. ^ "Election of New Members at the 2018 Spring Meeting", American Philosophical Society, April 28, 2018,
  80. ^ www.absoluto.de, martin weise //. "db artmag - all the news on Deutsche Bank Art / db artmag - alle Infos zur Kunst der Deutschen Bank". db-artmag.com. Retrieved February 22, 2018.
  81. ^ Kara Walker: Fall Frum Grace, Miss Pipi's Blue Tale, April 21 – June 25, 2011 February 23, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Lehmann Maupin Gallery, New York.
  82. ^ "Kara Walker: My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love — Calendar — Walker Art Center". www.walkerart.org. Retrieved February 13, 2016.
  83. ^ "Kara Walker Named 2005 Larry Aldrich Award Recipient". www.aldrichart.org. December 12, 2005. Retrieved April 13, 2019.
  84. ^ a b c d e f Doreen St. Félix (April 16, 2017), "Kara Walker's Next Act", New York Magazine.
  85. ^ Oler, Tammy (October 31, 2019). "57 Champions of Queer Feminism, All Name-Dropped in One Impossibly Catchy Song". Slate.
  86. ^ Kennedy, Randy (December 19, 2016). "Art Underground: A First Look at the Second Avenue Subway". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved March 25, 2022.
  87. ^ "Kara Walker | Artist | Royal Academy of Arts". Royal Academy of Arts. from the original on February 19, 2023.
  88. ^ a b Julie L. Belcove (March 2007), History Girl February 7, 2016, at the Wayback Machine W.
  89. ^ Klaus Bürgel, January 27 - March 17, 1999 Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts, San Francisco.
  90. ^ Curtis, Cathy (November 12, 1997), "Finding Direction: A Fantasy Self Put Artist Kara Walker on the Path to Personal, Professional Identity", "Los Angeles Times."
  91. ^ Blake Gopnik (April 25, 2014), "Rarely One for Sugarcoating: Kara Walker Creates a Confection at the Domino Refinery", The New York Times.
  92. ^ Foundation for Contemporary Arts Announces 2011 Grants to Artists Foundation for Contemporary Arts (FCA), press release of January 2011.
  93. ^ "Foundation for Contemporary Arts Announces 2016 Grants to Artists", Foundation for Contemporary Arts (FCA), press release of January 19, 2016.

References edit

External links edit

  • Kara Walker website
  • Biography, interviews, essays, artwork images and video clips from PBS series Art:21 -- Art in the Twenty-First Century - Season 2 (2003)
  • Kara E. Walker's Song of the South at REDCAT
  • Kara Walker at Ocula
  • Kara Walker at Smithsonian American Art Museum

kara, walker, kara, elizabeth, walker, born, november, 1969, american, contemporary, painter, silhouettist, print, maker, installation, artist, filmmaker, professor, explores, race, gender, sexuality, violence, identity, work, best, known, room, size, tableaux. Kara Elizabeth Walker born November 26 1969 is an American contemporary painter silhouettist print maker installation artist filmmaker and professor who explores race gender sexuality violence and identity in her work She is best known for her room size tableaux of black cut paper silhouettes Walker was awarded a MacArthur fellowship in 1997 at the age of 28 becoming one of the youngest ever recipients of the award 2 She has been the Tepper Chair in Visual Arts at the Mason Gross School of the Arts Rutgers University since 2015 3 Kara WalkerWalker in 2013Born 1969 11 26 November 26 1969 age 54 Stockton California U S NationalityAmericanNotable workDarkytown Rebellion 1 no place like home A SubtletyParentLarry Walker father AwardsMacArthur fellowshipWebsitekarawalkerstudio wbr comWalker is regarded as among the most prominent and acclaimed Black American artists working today 4 5 6 7 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Work and career 2 1 Notable works 2 2 Commissions 2 3 Other projects 2 4 Controversy 3 Exhibitions 3 1 Solo exhibitions 4 Collections 5 Recognition 6 Personal life 7 Further reading 7 1 Articles 7 2 Non fiction books and catalogues 7 3 Web sources 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksEarly life and education editWalker was born in 1969 in Stockton California 8 Her father Larry Walker was a painter and professor 8 9 10 Her mother Gwendolyn was an administrative assistant 11 12 A 2007 review in the New York Times described her early life as calm noting that nothing about Walker s very early life would seem to have predestined her for this task Born in 1969 she grew up in an integrated California suburb part of a generation for whom the uplift and fervor of the civil rights movement and the want it now anger of Black Power were yesterday s news 13 When Walker was 13 her father accepted a position at Georgia State University They settled in the city of Stone Mountain 14 11 The move was a culture shock for the young artist In sharp contrast with the multi cultural environment of coastal California Stone Mountain still held Ku Klux Klan rallies At her new high school Walker recalls I was called a nigger told I looked like a monkey accused I didn t know it was an accusation of being a Yankee 15 Walker received her BFA from the Atlanta College of Art in 1991 and her MFA from the Rhode Island School of Design in 1994 16 Walker found herself uncomfortable and afraid to address race within her art during her early college years worrying it would be received as typical or obvious however she began introducing race into her art while attending Rhode Island School of Design for her Master s Walker recalls reflecting on her father s influence One of my earliest memories involves sitting on my dad s lap in his studio in the garage of our house and watching him draw I remember thinking I want to do that too and I pretty much decided then and there at age 2 or 3 that I was an artist just like Dad 17 Work and career editWalker is best known for her panoramic friezes of cut paper silhouettes usually black figures against a white wall which address the history of American slavery and racism through violent and unsettling imagery 18 She has also produced works in gouache watercolor video animation shadow puppets magic lantern projections as well as large scale sculptural installations like her ambitious public exhibition with Creative Time called A Subtlety or the Marvelous Sugar Baby an Homage to the unpaid and overworked Artisans who have refined our Sweet tastes from the cane fields to the Kitchens of the New World on the Occasion of the demolition of the Domino Sugar Refining Plant 2014 The black and white silhouettes confront the realities of history while also using the stereotypes from the era of slavery to relate to persistent modern day concerns 19 nbsp Visitors at Walker s A Subtlety The white sculpture depicting a woman in the shape of a sphinx is visible in the background She first came to the art world s attention in 1994 with her mural Gone An Historical Romance of a Civil War as It Occurred Between the Dusky Thighs of One Young Negress and Her Heart This cut paper silhouette mural presenting an Antebellum south filled with sex and slavery was an instant hit 20 At the age of 28 she became the second youngest recipient of the John D and Catherine T MacArthur Foundation s genius grant 21 second only to renowned Mayanist David Stuart In 2007 the Walker Art Center exhibition Kara Walker My Complement My Oppressor My Enemy My Love was the artist s first full scale US museum survey Her influences include Andy Warhol whose art Walker says she admired as a child 12 Adrian Piper 22 23 and Robert Colescott 20 Walker s silhouette images work to bridge unfinished folklore in the Antebellum South raising identity and gender issues for African American women in particular Walker uses images from historical textbooks to show how enslaved African Americans were depicted during Antebellum South 12 The silhouette was typically a genteel tradition in American art history it was often used for family portraits and book illustrations Walker carried on this portrait tradition but used them to create characters in a nightmarish world a world that reveals the brutality of American racism and inequality Walker incorporates ominous sharp fragments of the South s landscape such as Spanish moss trees and a giant moon obscured by dramatic clouds These images surround the viewer and create a circular claustrophobic space This circular format paid homage to another art form the 360 degree historical painting known as the cyclorama 19 Some of her images are grotesque for example in The Battle of Atlanta 24 a white man presumably a Southern soldier is raping a black girl while her brother watches in shock a white child is about to insert his sword into a nearly lynched black woman s vagina and a male black slave rains tears all over an adolescent white boy The use of physical stereotypes such as flatter profiles bigger lips straighter nose and longer hair helps the viewer immediately distinguish the black subjects from the white subjects Walker depicts the inequalities and mistreatment of African Americans by their white counterparts Viewers at the Studio Museum in Harlem looked sickly shocked and appalled upon seeing her exhibition Thelma Golden the museum s chief curator said that throughout her career Walker has challenged and changed the way we look at and understand American history Her work is provocative emotionally wrenching yet overwhelmingly beautiful and intellectually compelling 25 Walker has said that her work addresses the way Americans look at racism with a soft focus avoiding the confluence of disgust and desire and voluptuousness that are all wrapped up in racism 19 In an interview with New York s Museum of Modern Art Walker stated I guess there was a little bit of a slight rebellion maybe a little bit of a renegade desire that made me realize at some point in my adolescence that I really liked pictures that told stories of things genre paintings historical paintings the sort of derivatives we get in contemporary society 10 Notable works edit In her piece created in 2000 Insurrection Our Tools Were Rudimentary Yet We Pressed On the silhouetted characters are against a background of colored light projections This gives the piece a transparent quality evocative of the production cels from the animated films of the 1930s It also references the plantation story Gone With the Wind and the Technicolor film based on it Also the light projectors were set up so that the shadows of the viewers were cast on the wall making them characters and encouraging them to assess the work s tough themes 19 In 2005 she created the exhibit 8 Possible Beginnings or The Creation of African America a Moving Picture which introduced moving images and sound This helped further immerse the viewers into her dark worlds In this exhibit the silhouettes are used as shadow puppets Additionally she uses the voice of herself and her daughter to suggest how the heritage of early American slavery has affected her image as an artist and woman of color 19 In response to Hurricane Katrina Walker created After the Deluge since the hurricane had devastated many poor and black areas of New Orleans Walker was bombarded with news images of black corporeality She likened these casualties to enslaved Africans piled onto ships for the Middle Passage the Atlantic crossing to America 12 I was seeing images that were all too familiar It was black people in a state of life or death desperation and everything corporeal was coming to the surface water excrement sewage It was a re inscription of all the stereotypes about the black body 26 Walker took part in the 2009 inaugural exhibition at Scaramouche Gallery in New York City with a group exhibit called The Practice of Joy Before Death It Just Wouldn t Be a Party Without You 27 Recent works by Kara Walker include Frum Grace Miss Pipi s Blue Tale April June 2011 at Lehmann Maupin in collaboration with Sikkema Jenkins amp Co A concurrent exhibition Dust Jackets for the Niggerati and Supporting Dissertations Drawings submitted ruefully by Dr Kara E Walker opened at Sikkema Jenkins on the same day 28 Walker created Katastwof Karavan for the 2018 art festival Prospect 4 The Lotus in Spite of the Swamp in New Orleans This sculpture was an old timey wagon with Walker s signature silhouettes portraying slaveholders and enslaved people making up the sides and a custom built steam powered calliope playing songs off black protest and celebration 29 Although Walker is known for her serious exhibitions with an overall deep meaning behind her work she admits relying on humor and viewer interaction Walker has stated I didn t want a completely passive viewer and I wanted to make work where the viewer wouldn t walk away he would either giggle nervously get pulled into history into fiction into something totally demeaning and possibly very beautiful 30 Commissions edit In 2002 Walker created a site specific installation An Abbreviated Emancipation from a larger work The Emancipation Approximation which was commissioned by The University of Michigan Museum of Art Ann Arbor 31 The work represented motifs and themes of race relations and their roots in the system of slavery before the Civil War In 2005 The New School unveiled Walker s first public art installation a site specific mural titled Event Horizon and placed along a grand stairway leading from the main lobby to a major public program space 32 In May 2014 Walker debuted her first sculpture a monumental piece and public artwork entitled A Subtlety or the Marvelous Sugar Baby an Homage to the unpaid and overworked Artisans who have refined our Sweet tastes from the cane fields to the Kitchens of the New World on the Occasion of the demolition of the Domino Sugar Refining Plant The massive work was installed in the derelict Domino Sugar Refinery in Brooklyn and commissioned by Creative Time The installation consisted of a female sphinx figure measuring approximately 75 feet long by 35 feet high preceded by an arrangement of fifteen life size young male figures dubbed attendants The sphinx which bore the head and features of the Mammy archetype was made by covering a core of machine cut blocks of polystyrene with 80 tons of white sugar donated by Domino Foods 33 The fifteen male attendants were modeled after racist figurines that Walker purchased online Five were made from solid sugar and the other ten were resin sculptures coated in molasses The fifteen attendants stood 60 inches tall and weighed 300 500 pounds each 34 35 The factory and the artwork were demolished after the exhibition closed in July 2014 as had been previously planned 14 36 37 38 Walker has hinted that the whiteness of the sugar references its aesthetic clean and pure quality The slave trade is highlighted in the sculpture as well Remarking on the overwhelmingly white audience at the exhibition in tandem with the political and historical content of the installation art critic Jamilah King argued that the exhibit itself is a striking and incredibly well executed commentary on the historical relationship between race and capital namely the money made off the backs of black slaves on sugar plantations throughout the Western Hemisphere So the presence of so many white people and my presence as a black woman who s a descendant of slaves seemed to also be part of the show 39 The work attracted over 130 000 visitors in its eight weekend run In his commentary on the sculpture art historian Richard J Powell wrote No matter how noble or celebratory in tone Walker s title for this work seemed in this post modern moment of moral skepticism and collective distrust a work of art in a public arena especially a visually perplexing nude would be subjected to not just serious criticism but Internet trolling and mockery 40 In 2016 Walker revealed Slaughter of the Innocents They Might be Guilty of Something In the painting Walker depicts an African American woman slicing a baby with a small scythe The influence for this detail was that of Margaret Garner an enslaved person who killed her daughter to prevent her child from returning to slavery nbsp Fons Americanus at Tate ModernIn 2019 Walker created Fons Americanus the fifth annual Hyundai Commission at Tate Modern s Turbine Hall 41 The fountain measuring up to 13 feet 4 0 m contains allegorical motifs referencing the histories of Africa America and Europe particularly pertaining to the Atlantic slave trade In her review of Walker s Fons Americanus for Artnet News Naomi Rea noted that the piece is so loaded with art historical and cultural references that you could teach an entire college history course without leaving Turbine Hall 41 She also observed that owing to the fountain s running water the great work of art could be both seen and heard in the Turbine Hall 41 The artwork is at the same time a sort of public monument inspired in part by the Victoria Memorial in front of Buckingham Palace In 2019 acclaimed writer Zadie Smith observed something about public monuments that Walker interrogates in Fons Americanus Monuments are complacent they put a seal upon the past they release us from dread For Walker dread is an engine it prompts us to remember and rightly fear the ruins we shouldn t want to return to and don t wish to re create if we re wise 42 In 2023 the San Francisco Museum of Modern Art SFMOMA commissioned Walker to create the first site specific installation for its Roberts Family Gallery 43 Other projects edit For the season 1998 1999 in the Vienna State Opera Walker designed a large scale picture 176 m2 as part of the exhibition series Safety Curtain conceived by museum in progress 44 In 2009 Walker curated volume 11 of Merge Records Score Invited by fellow artist Mark Bradford in 2010 to develop a set of free lesson plans for K 12 teachers at the J Paul Getty Museum Walker offered a lesson that had students collaborating on a story by exchanging text messages 45 In March 2012 artist Clifford Owens performed a score by Walker at MoMA PS1 46 In 2013 Walker produced 16 lithographs for a limited edition fine art printing of the libretto Porgy amp Bess by DuBose Heyward and Ira Gershwin published by the Arion Press Controversy edit nbsp The Means to an End A Shadow Drama in Five Acts etching and aquatint by Kara Walker five panels 1995 Honolulu Museum of ArtThe Detroit Institute of Art removed her The Means to an End A Shadow Drama in Five Acts 1995 from a 1999 exhibition Where the Girls Are Prints by Women from the DIA s Collection when African American artists and collectors protested its presence The five panel silhouette of an antebellum plantation scene was in the permanent collection and was to be re exhibited at some point according to a DIA spokesperson 47 A Walker piece entitled The moral arc of history ideally bends towards justice but just as soon as not curves back around toward barbarism sadism and unrestrained chaos caused controversy among employees at Newark Public Library who questioned its appropriateness for the reading room where it was hung The artwork included depictions of the Ku Klux Klan accompanied by a burning cross a naked black woman fellating a white man and Barack Obama 48 The piece was covered but not removed in December 2012 49 After discussion among employees and trustees the work was again uncovered 50 In March 2013 Walker visited the New Jersey Newark Public Library to discuss the work and the controversy Walker discussed the content of the work including racism identity and her use of heroic figures such as Obama Walker asked d o these archetypes collapse history They re supposed to expand the conversation but they often collapse it 48 Walker described the overwhelming subject matter of her works as a too muchness 48 In the 1999 PBS documentary I ll Make Me a World African American artist Betye Saar criticized Walker s work for its revolting and negative depiction of black stereotypes and enslaved people Saar accused the art of pandering to the enjoyment of the white art establishment In 1997 Saar emailed 200 fellow artists and politicians to voice her concerns about Walker s use of racist and sexist imagery and its positive reception in the art world 51 This attention to Walker s practice led to a 1998 symposium at Harvard University Change a Joke and Slip the Yoke A Harvard University Conference on Racist Imagery which discussed her work 52 Exhibitions editWalker s first museum survey 53 in 2007 was organized by Philippe Vergne for the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis and traveled to the Whitney Museum in New York the Hammer Museum 54 in Los Angeles and the ARC Musee d Art Moderne de la ville de Paris 55 14 Solo exhibitions edit 2007 Kara Walker My Complement My Enemy My Oppressor My Love 56 Walker Art Center 2013 Kara Walker Rise Up Ye Mighty Race 57 The Art Institute of Chicago 2013 We at the Camden Arts Centre are Exceedingly Proud to present an Exhibition of Capable Artworks by the Notable Hand of the Celebrated American Kara Elizabeth Walker Negress Camden Art Centre London 58 toured to the MAC Belfast in 2014 59 2014 A Subtlety or the Marvelous Sugar Baby an Homage to the unpaid and overworked Artisans who have refined our Sweet tastes from the cane fields to the Kitchens of the New World on the Occasion of the demolition of the Domino Sugar Refining Plant Creative Time Brooklyn NY 36 2016 The Ecstasy of St Kara Cleveland Museum of Art 60 61 2017 Sikkema Jenkins and Co is Compelled to Present the Most Astounding And Important Painting Show of the Fall Art Show Viewing Season Sikkema Jenkins amp Co New York NY 62 2019 Untitled Hyundai Commission Tate Modern 63 2021 A Black Hole is Everything a Star Longs to Be Kunstmuseum Basel Switzerland 64 2021 21 Kara Walker Cut to the Quick Cincinnati Art Museum Cincinnati OH 65 2023 Kara Walker Harper s Pictorial History of the Civil War Annotated New york Historical Society Museum and Library New York NY 66 Collections editAmong the public collections holding work by Walker are the Minneapolis Institute of Art 67 and the Weisman Art Museum Minneapolis Minnesota 68 the Tate Collection London 69 the Perez Art Museum Miami 70 the Museum of Contemporary Art Los Angeles 71 the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art Madison WI the Menil Collection 72 Houston 73 and the Muscarelle Museum of Art Williamsburg Virginia 74 Early large scale cut paper works have been collected by among others Jeffrey Deitch and Dakis Joannou 75 Recognition editIn 1997 Walker who was 28 at the time was one of the youngest people to receive a MacArthur fellowship 11 There was a lot of criticism weasel words because of her fame at such a young age and the fact that her art was most popular within the white community 76 In 2007 Walker was listed among Time magazine s 100 Most Influential People in The World Artists and Entertainers in a citation written by fellow artist Barbara Kruger 77 In 2012 she was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Letters 78 She was elected to the American Philosophical Society in 2018 79 Walker has received the Deutsche Bank Prize 80 and the Larry Aldrich Award 81 She was the United States representative for the 25th International Sao Paulo Biennial in Brazil 2002 82 She is the 2005 Larry Aldrich Award recipient 83 In 2016 completed a residency at the American Academy in Rome 84 Walker has been featured on PBS Her work appears on the cover of musician Arto Lindsay s recording Salt 2004 In addition she co wrote the song Suicide Demo for Kara Walker on the Destroyer album Kaputt Her name appears in the lyrics of the Le Tigre song Hot Topic 85 In 2017 a large scale mural portrait of Kara Walker done by artist Chuck Close was installed in a New York City subway station Q line 86th Street part of a MTA public arts program 86 In 2019 Walker was elected to the Royal Academy of Arts in London as an Honorary Royal Academician HonRA 87 Personal life editEarly in her career Walker lived in Providence Rhode Island with her husband German born jewelry professor Klaus Burgel 88 89 whom she married in 1996 In 1997 she gave birth to a daughter 90 84 The couple separated and their divorce was finalized in 2010 91 84 As of 2017 Walker is in a relationship with photographer and filmmaker Ari Marcopoulos 84 Walker moved to Fort Greene Brooklyn in 2003 and has been a professor of visual arts in the MFA program at Columbia University since then She maintained a studio in the Garment District Manhattan from 2010 until 2017 84 In May 2017 she moved her art practice to a studio in Industry City 84 She also owns a country home in rural Massachusetts 88 In addition to her own practice Walker served on the board of directors of the Foundation for Contemporary Arts FCA between 2011 92 and 2016 93 Further reading editArticles edit D Arcy David Kara Walker Kicks Up a Storm Modern Painters April 2006 Garrett Shawn Marie Return of the Repressed Theater 32 no 2 Summer 2002 Kazanjian Dodie Cut it Out Vogue May 2005 Szabo Julia Kara Walker s Shock Art New York Times Magazine 146 no 50740 March 1997 Walker Hamza Kara Walker Cut it Out Nka Journal of Contemporary African Art no 11 12 Fall Winter 2000 Als Hilton The Shadow Act The New Yorker October 8 2007 Als Hilton The Sugar Sphinx The New Yorker May 8 2014 Scott Andrea K Kara Walker s Ghosts of Future Evil the New Yorker September 9 2017 Wall David Transgression Excess and the Violence of Looking in the Art of Kara Walker Oxford Art Journal vol 33 no 3 2010 https www jstor org stable 40983288Non fiction books and catalogues edit Barrett Terry Interpreting Art Reflecting Wondering and Responding New York McGraw Hill 2002 Berry Ian Darby English Vivian Patterson Mark Reinhardt eds Narratives of a Negress Boston MIT Press 2003 Carpenter Elizabeth and Joan Rothfuss Bits amp Pieces Put Together to Present a Semblance of A Whole Walker Art Center Collections Minneapolis Walker Art Center 2005 Gere Vanina Kara Walker October Files series The MIT Press 2022 https mitpress mit edu 9780262544474 kara walker Jacobs Harriet Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl 1858 Shaw Gwendolyn Dubois Seeing the Unspeakable The Art of Kara Walker Durham and London Duke University Press 2004 http www worldcat org oclc 55008318 Vergne Philippe et al Kara Walker My Complement My Enemy My Oppressor My Love Minneapolis Walker Art Center 2007 http www worldcat org oclc 602217956 Walker Kara E Kara Walker After the Deluge New York Rizzoli 2007 http www worldcat org oclc 144225309 Walker Kara E Olga Gambari and Richard Flood Kara Walker A Negress of Noteworthy Talent Torino Fondazione Merz 2011 http www worldcat org oclc 768397358Web sources edit The Art Story Kara Walker Modern Art Insight 2016Notes edit Bravo Doris Maria Reina Kara Walker Darkytown Rebellion Khan Academy Green Adrienne March 3 2018 How Kara Walker Recasts Racism s Bitter Legacy The Atlantic Retrieved February 16 2022 Intrabartola Lisa September 25 2015 Esteemed Artist Kara Walker Named Tepper Chair www rutgers edu Mzezewa Tariro September 14 2017 Opinion Kara Walker Is Tired of Talking But Her Canvases Scream The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 16 2022 Smee Sebastian February 9 2021 Perspective The bright light shining on America s best Black artists has a fascinating backstory Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved February 16 2022 Sutton Benjamin August 30 2017 Dear Kara Walker If You re Tired of Standing Up Please Sit Down Hyperallergic Retrieved February 16 2022 Musser Amber Jamilla September 1 2016 Queering Sugar Kara Walker s Sugar Sphinx and the Intractability of Black Female Sexuality Signs Journal of Women in Culture and Society 42 1 153 174 doi 10 1086 686756 ISSN 0097 9740 S2CID 151909296 a b Shaw Gwendolyn DuBois 2004 Speaking the Unspeakable The Art of Kara Walker Duke University Press p 12 ISBN 0 8223 3396 1 Belkove Julie L March 2007 History Girl www wmagazine com Conde Nast Archived from the original on February 7 2016 Retrieved February 6 2016 a b Kara Walker Biography Retrieved March 30 2017 a b c Als Hilton October 8 2007 The Shadow Act The New Yorker a b c d Looking at the History of the United States Including the Shocking Parts Archived from the original on September 14 2011 Retrieved March 25 2012 Cotter Holland October 12 2007 Black and White but Never Simple The New York Times a b c Gopnik Blake April 25 2014 Rarely One for Sugarcoating Kara Walker Creates a Confection at the Domino Refinery The New York Times Retrieved February 6 2016 Kara Walker American Artist The Art Story Foundation Retrieved April 20 2017 The Art of Kara Walker Walker Art Center Archived from the original on March 8 2012 Retrieved March 13 2012 Wilson Flo On Walls and the Walkers The International Review of African American Art 20 3 17 19 Kara Walker Archived May 25 2014 at the Wayback Machine Solomon R Guggenheim Museum New York a b c d e Finger Brad 2011 50 Contemporary Artists You Should Know Germany Prestel Verlag p 143 ISBN 978 3 7913 4530 7 a b Cotter Holland Kara Walker The New York Times n d MacArthur Fellows Meet the Class of 1997 www macfound org Retrieved February 13 2017 Cotter Holland October 12 2007 Kara Walker Kara Walker My Complement My Enemy My Oppressor My Love Whitney Museum of American Art Art Review The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 4 2016 MoMA Projects 1999 Conversations Kara Walker www moma org Retrieved March 4 2016 Sikkema Jenkins amp Co Kara Walker Trotman Krishan July 2003 Kara Walker electrifies the Studio Museum in Harlem New York Amsterdam News Archived from the original on October 20 2014 Retrieved March 7 2015 David D Arcy April 2006 The Eyes of the Storm Kara Walker on Hurricanes Heroes and Villains Modern Painters Retrieved April 22 2008 info at scaramoucheart dot com Scaramouche NY The Practice of Joy Before Death Scaramouche Gallery www scaramoucheart com Retrieved May 17 2022 Professor Kara Walker Exhibition Opens at Lehmann Maupin Sikkema Jenkins Archived from the original on September 6 2011 Retrieved March 25 2012 Loos Ted February 21 2018 After a Blowup Kara Walker Lets Off Steam in New Orleans Published 2018 The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved November 20 2020 Kara Walker 53 Artworks Bio amp Shows on Artsy www artsy net Retrieved February 13 2016 Kara Walker Pictures From Another Time published in conjunction with the exhibition Kara Walker An Abbreviated Emancipation from The Emancipation Approximation New School University Unveils Event Horizon the First Major Public Art Commission by Artist Kara Walker Press release of April 26 2005 CreativeTime Presents Kara Walker Creative Time Inc Retrieved April 20 2017 Kara Walker A Subtlety or the Marvelous Sugar Baby Artsy June 17 2014 Retrieved February 13 2016 How Kara Walker Built A 75 Foot Long Candy Sphinx In The Abandoned Domino Sugar Factory www vice com May 8 2014 Retrieved May 17 2022 a b Creative Time Projects Kara Walker A Sonorous Subtlety KARA WALKER with Kara Rooney Brooklyn Rail May 6 2014 Walker A Subtlety or the Marvelous Sugar Baby on YouTube King Jamilah May 21 2014 The Overwhelming Whiteness of Black Art Powell Richard J 2020 Going there Black visual satire Yale University Press p 147 ISBN 978 0 300 24574 5 OCLC 1226601331 a b c Rea Naomi September 30 2019 Do You Find Europe s Grand Public Fountains Charming Kara Walker s Spectacular Turbine Hall Commission May Change That artnet news Retrieved March 28 2020 Smith Zadie What Do We Want History to Do to Us The New York Review of Books Retrieved March 28 2020 Francesca Aton 26 May 2023 Kara Walker Receives Major Commission from SFMOMA ARTnews Safety Curtain 1998 1999 museum in progress Vienna Jori Finkel June 17 2010 Mark Bradford leads Kara Walker Cathy Opie and more to create online teacher resource for Getty Los Angeles Times Rozalia Jovanovic Clifford Owens and Kara Walker at MoMA PS1 An Epilogue With RoseLee Goldberg Observer March 15 2012 Art Until Now No More Archived from the original on February 22 2014 Retrieved June 21 2013 http faculty risd edu bcampbel dubois Censoreship pdf sic a b c Kramer Jessica March 13 2013 Kara Walker Addresses Art and Controversy at the Newark Public Library HuffPost Retrieved April 26 2014 Carter Barry December 2 2012 Censorship or common decency Newark Library covers up controversial artwork The Star Ledger Retrieved January 19 2012 Carter Barry January 20 2013 Controversial painting in Newark Library is bared once again The Star Ledger Retrieved January 20 2012 Hunter Drohojowska philp October 31 1999 Art amp Architecture Reframing a black experience Kara Walker s images Stir Devte in the African American Community on Whether they Enlighten or Degrade Los Angeles Times Newspaper ProQuest 421566885 dead link Mary Chou Walker Kara The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art Vol 5 pp 139 140 Kara Walker My Complement My Enemy My Oppressor My Love walkerart org Retrieved February 22 2018 Home Hammer Museum The Hammer Museum Retrieved February 22 2018 agence GAYA La nouvelle City of Paris Museum of Modern Art www mam paris fr Retrieved February 22 2018 Kara Walker My Complement My Enemy My Oppressor My Love walkerart org Retrieved March 21 2023 Kara Walker Rise Up Ye Mighty Race The Art Institute of Chicago February 21 2013 Retrieved March 21 2023 Archive Camden Arts Centre archive camdenartscentre org Retrieved March 30 2020 Kara Walker Art Exhibitions The MAC Belfast themaclive com Retrieved March 30 2020 Seals Tyra A 2016 Exhibition The Ecstasy of St Kara Elizabeth Walker Kara 2016 The ecstasy of St Kara Smith Tracy K Griswold William Thuring Reto Rutland Beau Lansdowne John Art historian Cleveland Museum of Art Cleveland OH ISBN 9780300227154 OCLC 959417933 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Pinckney Darryl Black Lives Matter on Kara Walker Sikkema Jenkins and Co is Compelled to present The most Astounding and Important Painting show of the fall Art Show viewing season New York Review of Books November 9 2017 Tate Hyundai Commission Kara Walker Exhibition at Tate Modern Tate Retrieved August 6 2019 Tate KARA WALKER A BLACK HOLE IS EVERYTHING A STAR LONGS TO BE museenbasel in German Retrieved August 18 2021 Cincinnati Art Museum Kara Walker Cut to the Quick From the Collections of Jordan D Schnitzer and His Family Foundation Cincinnati Art Museum Retrieved March 17 2023 Kara Walker Harper s Pictorial History of the Civil War Annotated www nyhistory org Retrieved March 17 2023 Walker Kara January 24 2017 African American Minneapolis Institute of Art Kara Walker in AskArt com Kara Walker Collection tate Retrieved March 4 2016 Securing a Motherland Should Have Been Sufficient Perez Art Museum Miami Perez Art Museum Miami Retrieved August 16 2023 30 Americans Kara Walker Archived from the original on March 8 2012 Retrieved March 25 2012 Home The Menil Collection The Menil Collection Retrieved March 18 2016 Kara Walker American born 1969 Freedom Fighters for the Society of Forgotten Knowledge Northern Domestic Scene The Menil Collection The Menil Collection The Menil Collection Retrieved March 18 2016 You Cannot Win Ink wash and graphite on white wove paper Curators at Work III Muscarelle Museum of Art 2013 Retrieved June 26 2018 permanent dead link Julia Szabo March 23 1997 Kara Walker s Shock Art New York Times Magazine Solange James January 24 2008 Art Critique Kara Walker Copious Magazine Barbara Kruger 2007 Kara Walker Time Retrieved July 26 2007 Visual Arts Faculty Kara Walker Inducted into The American Academy of Arts and Letters Archived February 26 2014 at the Wayback Machine Columbia University School of the Arts March 20 2012 Election of New Members at the 2018 Spring Meeting American Philosophical Society April 28 2018 www absoluto de martin weise db artmag all the news on Deutsche Bank Art db artmag alle Infos zur Kunst der Deutschen Bank db artmag com Retrieved February 22 2018 Kara Walker Fall Frum Grace Miss Pipi s Blue Tale April 21 June 25 2011 Archived February 23 2014 at the Wayback Machine Lehmann Maupin Gallery New York Kara Walker My Complement My Enemy My Oppressor My Love Calendar Walker Art Center www walkerart org Retrieved February 13 2016 Kara Walker Named 2005 Larry Aldrich Award Recipient www aldrichart org December 12 2005 Retrieved April 13 2019 a b c d e f Doreen St Felix April 16 2017 Kara Walker s Next Act New York Magazine Oler Tammy October 31 2019 57 Champions of Queer Feminism All Name Dropped in One Impossibly Catchy Song Slate Kennedy Randy December 19 2016 Art Underground A First Look at the Second Avenue Subway The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved March 25 2022 Kara Walker Artist Royal Academy of Arts Royal Academy of Arts Archived from the original on February 19 2023 a b Julie L Belcove March 2007 History Girl Archived February 7 2016 at the Wayback Machine W Klaus Burgel January 27 March 17 1999 Wattis Institute for Contemporary Arts San Francisco Curtis Cathy November 12 1997 Finding Direction A Fantasy Self Put Artist Kara Walker on the Path to Personal Professional Identity Los Angeles Times Blake Gopnik April 25 2014 Rarely One for Sugarcoating Kara Walker Creates a Confection at the Domino Refinery The New York Times Foundation for Contemporary Arts Announces 2011 Grants to Artists Foundation for Contemporary Arts FCA press release of January 2011 Foundation for Contemporary Arts Announces 2016 Grants to Artists Foundation for Contemporary Arts FCA press release of January 19 2016 References editHans Werner Holzwarth ed 2008 Art Now Vol 3 A cutting edge selection of today s most exciting artists Taschen p 488 ISBN 978 3 8365 0511 6 Goldbaum Karen ed Kara Walker Pictures From Another Time Seattle Marquand Books Inc ISBN 1 891024 50 7 Smith Zadie What Do We Want History to Do to Us The New York Review of Books February 27 2020 https www nybooks com articles 2020 02 27 kara walker what do we want history to do to us Vergne Phillppe Kara Walker My Complement My Enemy My Oppressor My Love Minneapolis Walker Art Center ISBN 978 0 935640 86 1External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Kara Walker Kara Walker website The Time 100 Time magazine s profile of Walker Biography interviews essays artwork images and video clips from PBS series Art 21 Art in the Twenty First Century Season 2 2003 Kara E Walker s Song of the South at REDCAT Kara Walker at Ocula Kara Walker at Smithsonian American Art Museum Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kara Walker amp oldid 1202076954, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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