Hog feed 102 is an exemplary work by Jared Owens that combines two of the artist’s primary signatures: the use of soil smuggled out of the grounds at F. C. I. Fairton, a prison in which Owens was incarcerated, and the stowage diagram of the Brookes slave ship. This diagram from 1788 is a logistical blueprint of how to pack Black bodies efficiently, in tiered serial form, into the hold of a ship. Merging these vocabularies, Owens has laced a burlap sack for pig feed into the work to advance a multi-layered commentary on American prisons as ostensible ‘human farms’ that dehumanize inmates by turning them into a commodity for the prison industrial complex.
During more than 18 years of collective incarceration, Jared Owens became a self-taught artist, working in painting, sculpture, and installation, using materials and references culled from penal matter...
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Welcome to BSA Images of the Week! How are feeling? Did you have a good Thanksgiving day, and did you see the crowds and balloons and marching bands along the parade route and the still intact orange and yellow leaves on the trees on Central Park West? Did you see Dolly Parton dressed as a Dallas Cowboy cheerleader singing at the halftime game, and did you see your girl Ava from up the block [...]...
James McKissic shares pieces from his collection in AVA's 'Rooted in Color' exhibition | Chattanooga Times Free Press Photo from AVA Gallery / "Minister, Chicago 1950" by Gordon Parks The Association for Visual Arts ventures into new territory with its first show of 2020...
New Documentary Offers Touching Portrait of Collector and Philanthropist Agnes Gund - via ARTnews...
For more than 40 years, Bernard and Shirley Kinsey have amassed one of the largest private collections of Black paintings, letters, books and other artifacts to teach the next generations what history has erased....