Organized around a single object—the marble bust Why Born Enslaved! by French sculptor Jean-Baptiste Carpeaux—Fictions of Emancipation: Carpeaux Recast is the first exhibition at The Met to examine Western sculpture in relation to the histories of transatlantic slavery, colonialism, and empire.
Created in the wake of American emancipation and some twenty years
after the abolition of slavery in the French Atlantic, Why Born Enslaved! was
shaped by the enduring popularity of antislavery imagery, the development of
nineteenth-century ethnographic theories of racial difference, and France’s
colonialist fascination with Africa. The exhibition will explore the sculpture’s
place within these contexts.
Featuring more than thirty-five works of art in sections unfolding
around Carpeaux’s sculpture, Fictions of Emancipation will offer an in-depth
look at portrayals of Black enslavement, emancipation, and personhood with an
aim toward challenging the notion that representation in the wake of abolition
constitutes a clear moral or political stance. Important works by Josiah
Wedgwood, Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi, Charles Cordier, Edmonia Lewis,
Louis-Simon Boizot, and others will show how Western artists of the nineteenth
century engaged with the Black figure as a political symbol and site of
exoticized beauty, while contemporary sculptures by Kara Walker and Kehinde
Wiley will connect the dialogue around Carpeaux’s bust to current conversations
about the legacies of slavery in the Western world.
This exhibition was conceived in collaboration with guest curator
Wendy S. Walters and enriched through conversations with numerous intellectual
partners. It is one of many projects that the Museum is undertaking in an
effort to reassess and broaden the narratives it presents about the past and
present.
https://www.metmuseum.org/exhibitions/listings/2022/carpeaux-recast
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