Twenty Years of Art/Work image 1Twenty Years of Art/Work image 2Twenty Years of Art/Work image 3Twenty Years of Art/Work image 4Twenty Years of Art/Work image 5Twenty Years of Art/Work image 6Twenty Years of Art/Work image 7Twenty Years of Art/Work image 8Twenty Years of Art/Work image 9Twenty Years of Art/Work image 10
Photobook

Twenty Years of Art/Work

For all our sakes, I hope Deborah Roberts continues to stake a claim, through her work, for a more expansive view of Black children. – Dawoud Bey Deborah Roberts: 20 Years of Art/Work provides the definitive look at the artist’s practice over the past two decades. With newly commissioned texts and a thorough dive into Roberts’ archive, this monograph offers a comprehensive view of one of today’s most significant artists and social observers. An extensive plate section is accompanied by a personal, heartfelt foreword from Dawoud Bey on “the tragic mischaracterization of Black children”; an insightful essay from Ekow Eshun on the social and political histories of innocence, race, and the fractured nature of the contemporary Black experience; a celebratory tribute from Carolyn Jean Martin on the musicality, humility, and generosity of Roberts’ practice; and a free-ranging conversation between Roberts and Sarah Elizabeth Lewis. Since the beginning of her artistic career, otherness has been at the center of Roberts’ consciousness. Her early ideals of race and beauty were shaped by and linked through Renaissance art and fashion magazines— mythical, heroic, beautiful, and powerful images that embodied a particular status not afforded equally to anyone Roberts knew. Influencing the way she viewed herself and other African Americans, those images led her to investigate the way their identities had been imagined and shaped by societal interpretations of beauty. Having one’s identity dismantled, marginalized and regulated to non-human status demanded action. This led Roberts to critically engage image-making in art history and pop-culture, and ultimately grapple with whatever power and authority these images have over the female figure.

Available

What did you love about this book?

No comments yet. Be the first to comment!

Colophon
CreditsAll images on this page are owned by the respective creator.
DiscoverFeedShelf