Condition Report

2000 - Drawing & Print (Drawing & Print)

Glenn Ligon

location: New York, New York
year born: 1960
gender: male
nationality: American
home town: Bronx, New York

Glenn Ligon’s diptych, Condition Repor t is comprised of two side-by-side prints. Though simple, each contains a nested stack of historical and self-referential quotations. Both black-and-white prints depict a version of Ligon’s 1988 painting, Untitled (I Am A Man) , which declares the words of the parenthetical in blocky black letters. Ligon’s painting, of course, is itself a reappropriation and, in some ways, a reproduction. Based on the simple, declarative protest signs carried by sanitation workers in Memphis, Tennessee during the height of the Civil Rights Movement, Ligon’s painting recontextualized this now-iconic object as a work of art. While the print on the left of Condition Report directly mirrors Ligon’s 1988 painting, the print on the right of the pair includes marks, scribbles, and hand-written notations around the edges and borders of the image. These additions to the work are the condition report notes of the title, and refer back to the 1988 original—though this time not as it existed as a symbol of a historical event, but as it exists in the present as a rarified art object. Tracing a simple phrase—I AM A MAN—through these iterations as declaration, symbol, object, and surface, Ligon levies questions of representation and race, commodification and history, and the value and preciousness of one’s identity.


American artist Glenn Ligon is well known for his conceptually based works in paint, neon, photography, sculpture, and video. He draws upon American history, literature, and other sources to create works centered on the black American experience. Ligon filters through cultural sources to create compositions that highlight social inequalities, commemorate struggles, and point fingers at hypocrisy. Rendered in neon, through paint, and in other media, Ligon often draws out the words of others—be they the sanitation workers who protested in Memphis, Tennessee, with signs declaring I AM A MAN; or the controversial and confrontational Richard Pryor, whose jokes become electric letters on Ligon’s canvases.


Colors:



No Title
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Félix González-Torres

1992

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The six grandfathers, Paha Sapa, in the year 502 002
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Matthew Buckingham

2002

Matthew Buckingham presents a narrative directly connected with a highly symbolic site in the United States, the Mount Rushmore Memorial*...

Sirens
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Paul Kos

1977

Taking its title from the eponymous mythological creature—famously featured as sea nymphs in Homer’s Odyssey...

Rabbithole
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Chitra Ganesh

2010

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I (heart) Data Mining
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Amy Balkin

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Silhouette in the Graveyard
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Chitra Ganesh

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The Black Canyon Deep Semantic Image Segments
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Trevor Paglen

2020

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Trevor Paglen’s ongoing research focuses on artificial intelligence and machine vision, i.e...

Sultana's Dream
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Chitra Ganesh

2018

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Sound of Ice Melting
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Paul Kos

1970

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Half Dome Hough Transform
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Trevor Paglen

2020

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1982

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Paul Kos

1976

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Blood Sugar
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Cheryl Donegan

2013

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Untitled (City Limits)
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Allen Ruppersberg

1970

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Susan Sontag
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Peter Hujar

1975

Susan Sontag, the author of On Photography and Regarding the Pain of Others, was captured through Hujar’s now-iconic photograph in a relaxed yet pensive pose...

The Bedroom
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Barbara Bloom

1997

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