91.44 x 45.72 cm
Yétúndé Olagbaju’s On becoming a star series recuperates the figure of ‘Mammy’, a stereotype rooted in American slavery that typically depicts a larger, dark skinned woman as a maternal presence, often within a domestic setting, and typically taking care of white children. After being referred to as a Mammy during their undergraduate degree, Olagbaju began exploring the figure in 2016 as a means of healing. Olagbaju’s first presentation on this topic was a book called Black Collectibles: Mammy and Friends (1997) that sells tchotchkes—like salt and pepper shakers or figurines—of the racist mammy image taking different forms, from which Olagbaju exorcised the Mammy images by carefully cutting them out of the book with a razor blade. With this act, and the many incarnations the gesture takes throughout the series, Olagbaju liberates Mammy from an exhausting existence as a culturally and racially charged entity, imagining the figure instead as a brilliant nebula reflecting across the cosmos. By revising Mammy’s origin story, the artist gives her, and themselves, a new agency that allows them to be obscured, unreadable, and vigorously independent. In A Chrysalis No. 2 , Olagbaju’s first public presentation of sculptural work, Mammy is transformed into a bust cast in bronze, providing a three-dimensional view of the many forms she might take collapsed into one. By casting Mammy in immutable bronze, but crafting a thumbprint in place of facial features, Olagbaju both firmly anchors her in the known physical world and permanently obstructs any traditional way of understanding or relating to her on a domestic human level.
Yétúndé Olagbaju is an artist, organizer, strategist, and educator. Their practice employs video, sculpture, photography, gesture, and performance as methods to critically address Black labor, legacy, and processes of healing. Their practice draws upon a desire to understand history, the people that made it, the myths and realities surrounding them, and how Olagbaju’s own identity is implicated in history’s timeline. Major themes that the artist engages with in their work include myths and how they are produced, notions of motherhood, expectations concerning this role, and how racism and settler colonialism affect the ways that maternal and domestic labor are valued. In that vein, the artist is also concerned with perceptions of labor, what it is and means, who conducts certain kinds of labor, and what kinds of labor go unnoticed or erased. They are also invested in exploring the kinds of stories that get erased, and whether erasure can be conceived of as a tool for liberation and transformation. Considering transformation, Olagbaju’s work meditates on how change occurs and how to hold space for change and honor transformation. Questions that the artist poses hinge on memorialization and how to memorialize transformation and unseen labor. Pressingly, Olagbaju asks: How does one memorialize the vastness of Blackness and Black legacy?
Biennale de Lyon — 2024 — Usines Fagor — Exhibition — Slash Paris Login Newsletter Twitter Facebook Biennale de Lyon — 2024 — Usines Fagor — Exhibition — Slash Paris English Français Home Events Artists Venues Magazine Videos Back Biennale de Lyon — 2024 Exhibition Mixed media Upcoming © Biennale de Lyon 2024 Biennale de Lyon 2024 In over 1 year: September 1, 2024 → January 1, 2025 (Dates provisoires) Créée en 1991, la Biennale de Lyon est l’une des plus importantes biennales d’art contemporain au plan international et la première manifestation artistique d’envergure au plan national...
Camille Esayan, Lara Bouvet — Corps composé(s) — Hôpital européen Georges-Pompidou — Exposition — Slash Paris Connexion Newsletter Twitter Facebook Camille Esayan, Lara Bouvet — Corps composé(s) — Hôpital européen Georges-Pompidou — Exposition — Slash Paris Français English Accueil Événements Artistes Lieux Magazine Vidéos Retour Précédent Suivant Camille Esayan, Lara Bouvet — Corps composé(s) Exposition Collage, photographie, techniques mixtes © Camille Esayan Camille Esayan, Lara Bouvet Corps composé(s) Encore 19 jours : 25 janvier → 1 mars 2024 Un projet de Camille Esayan et Lara Bouvet avec le Service de chirurgie cancérologique, gynécologique et du sein de l’Hôpital européen Georges-Pompidou, Paris...
Graphic memoir charts an ominous journey from Fidel Castro’s Cuba to Donald Trump’s America Art market Museums & heritage Exhibitions Books Podcasts Columns Technology Adventures with Van Gogh Search Search Books review Graphic memoir charts an ominous journey from Fidel Castro’s Cuba to Donald Trump’s America Cuban American artist Edel Rodriguez, labelled a “worm” for fleeing Cold War Cuba in 1980, tells story of his progress from impoverished boyhood to creating alarming covers for Time magazine David D'Arcy 9 February 2024 Share The front cover of Worm © 2023 Edel Rodriguez On the cover of the graphic memoir Worm: A Cuban American Odyssey , which follows the artist and illustrator Edel Rodriguez from 1970s Cuba to the US, the author draws himself as a boy wearing the red scarf of the José Martí Pioneer Organization and a beret with a star high on his head—the attribute of no less than Ernesto “Che” Guevara...
Randa Maroufi’s Bab Sebta , is named after a Spanish enclave in Morocco, Ceuta...