Faith Ringgold.

Faith Ringgold. : Faith Ringgold American People Series #20: Die 1967 Huile sur toile, deux panneaux 182,9 x 365,8 cm The Museum of Modern Art, New York, Purchase; and gift of The Modern Women's Fund, Ronnie F. Heyman, Glenn and Eva Dubin, Michael S. Ovitz, Daniel and Bret    Faith Ringgold. : Faith Ringgold Picasso’s Studio: The French Collection Part I, #7 1991 Acrylique sur toile, tissus imprimé et teint, encre 185,4 x 172,7 cm Worcester Art Museum; Charlotte E. W. Buffington Fund. © Faith Ringgold / ARS, NY and DACS, London, courtesy ACA Ga    Faith Ringgold. : Faith Ringgold The Wake and Resurrection of the Bicentennial Negro 1975-89 Technique mixte, dimensions variables Courtesy the artist and ACA Galleries, New York. © Faith Ringgold / ARS, NY and DACS, London, courtesy ACA Galleries, New York 2022. Photo: Ro    Faith Ringgold. : Faith Ringgold United States of Attica 1972 Lithographie Offset 55 × 69,6 cm Courtesy de l’artiste et ACA Galleries, New York. © Faith Ringgold / ARS, NY and DACS, London, courtesy ACA Galleries, New York 2022   


The exhibition


Born in 1930 into a working-class Harlem family, race relations in the United States have been a central concern of her paintings since the beginning, when segregation continued despite the passage of the Civil Rights Act, which legally ended it. "It was not possible to ignore the situation: everything was either black or white, and in a clear-cut way," she explains. So Ringgold created an art form that was her own, an art of miscegenation, neither black nor white, very colorful. "Painting is an offensive and defensive instrument of war," said the cubist. By referring to him, Ringgold seems to tell us that there is no greater enemy than racism. In front of the imposing format of American People Series #20: Die (1967) and the panic of its bloodied characters, all threatened by a gun or a knife, how can we not think of Guernica, its bull symbol of cruelty, its mother screaming with her child in her arms, its wounded horse neighing in pain?

Extract from the article by Emma Noyant published in the N°105 de la revue Art Absolument. Publication date: March 17, 2023.




When


31/01/2023 - 02/07/2023
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