OCTOBER 25, 2016–JANUARY
29, 2017
This major monographic
exhibition is the largest museum retrospective to date of the work of American
artist Kerry James Marshall (born 1955). Encompassing nearly 80 works—including
72 paintings—that span the artist's remarkable 35-year career, it reveals Marshall's
practice to be one that synthesizes a wide range of pictorial traditions to
counter stereotypical representations of black people in society and reassert
the place of the black figure within the canon of Western painting.
Born before the passage of
the Civil Rights Act in Birmingham, Alabama, and witness to the Watts rebellion
in 1965, Marshall has long been an inspired and imaginative chronicler of the
African American experience. He is known for his large-scale narrative history
paintings featuring black figures—defiant assertions of blackness in a medium
in which African Americans have long been invisible—and his exploration of art
history covers a broad temporal swath stretching from the Renaissance to
20th-century American abstraction. Marshall critically examines and reworks the
Western canon through its most archetypal forms: the historical tableau,
landscape and genre painting, and portraiture. His work also touches upon
vernacular forms such as the muralist tradition and the comic book in order to
address and correct, in his words, the "vacuum in the image bank" and
to make the invisible visible.
http://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2016/kerry-james-marshall
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