Torkwase Dyson
A Place Called Dark Black (Bird and Lava)
2020
On View in James M. Kemper Gallery, Room 3
This large-scale abstract painting is part of Torkwase Dyson's Bird and Lava series, an exploration of spaces of ecological, architectural, and infrastructural liberation. The foundational geometric shapes that comprise her works—squares, trapezoids, and curved lines—are connected to the history of Black resistance and the individuals who traversed geographies in the United States to escape slavery. The square refers to Henry Box Brown, who had himself shipped in a box from Richmond to Philadelphia in 1849. The trapezoid is culled from the experiences of Harriet Jacobs, who spent seven years in an attic crawlspace, as recounted in her autobiography, Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl (1861). The curve comes from the hull of a ship, such as the one in which Anthony Barnes escaped from Richmond to Boston in 1854. A large circle built up of cumulative layers of washes and textures dominates Dyson's dark, aqueous composition. The strong horizon line dividing the circle creates a delineation between, above, and below that suggests a segregation of space but also exists as an interstitial zone. As the artist describes it, that line, combined with the watery composition, evokes broad ideas of extraction (of resources and bodies), while the diagrammatic markings surrounding the circle allude to the ways in which Black bodies (both past and present) move around the planet. [Permanent collection label, 2022]
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Artist
Torkwase Dyson
(American, b. 1973)
- Title A Place Called Dark Black (Bird and Lava)
- Date 2020
- Medium Acrylic and ink on canvas
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Dimensions
unframed | 96 x 80 x 2 in.
- Credit line University purchase, Parsons Fund and Bixby Fund, 2021
- Object number WU 2021.0006
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Technique
acrylic painting
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Work type
painting
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Theme
Slavery and Its Legacies
Abstraction
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Currently on View
James M. Kemper Gallery, Room 3
Let Us Feel Heartbreak: Contemporary Art and the Environment
Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, Washington University in St. Louis, 08/17/2024
Torkwase Dyson: Bird and Lava
Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, Washington University in St. Louis, 03/22/2023 - 07/10/2023
Stories of Resistance
Contemporary Art Museum St. Louis, 03/12/2021 - 08/15/2021
Pace Gallery
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