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The Weisman’s fall exhibition presents a suite of prints by artist Kara Walker “annotating” Civil War-era illustrations in Harper’s Weekly to foreground Black experiences missing from the official record
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Kara Walker, born in 1969, is one of the most intellectually provocative and creatively productive artists of her generation. Her groundbreaking work revisits archival material to challenge dominant narratives of American history, exploring race, gender, sexuality, violence, identity, and social justice. Throughout her work in installation, film, drawing, and printmaking, Walker calls up historical imagery and—through redrawing, adding, and complicating existing narratives—creates startling tableaus meant to prompt thought and reconsideration in her diverse audiences. Walker’s work delves deeply into the experience of being Black in the United States, exposing a rich cartography of perception, misperception, and devastating prejudice that is dynamically determined by place, time, and personal perspective.
This exhibition, organized by the New Britain Museum of American Art and The Museum Box, presents Walker’s print portfolio, Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War (Annotated), 2005. This suite of fifteen large-scale prints considers experiences of racism and violence against African Americans that were absent or only alluded to in dominant historical representations of the Civil War. Shown with Walker’s series is a group of original Harper’s Weekly engravings of the Civil War by the New England-born and -based, nineteenth century American realist artist, Winslow Homer (1836-1910). While not all of Walker’s “annotated” works are addressed to Homer works, this pairing of Walker’s contemporary prints with examples of works from the Harper’s material that inspired her opens opportunities to consider distinction and connections between the two bodies of work.
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Each print in the portfolio includes an enlargement of a woodcut plate from Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War, a two-volume compendium published in 1866 with the intention of narrating events of the war “just as they occurred,” according to the anthology’s editors. By overlaying silhouette figures, predominantly of African Americans, Walker visually disrupts the original woodcuts, forcing them to confront the people and historical events left out of the “official” record. In this way, Walker’s highly charged annotations prepare a space in which to reckon with the reality of racial oppression that persists in the United States today.
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Image credits: Top, illustration by Weisman Art Museum. Middle: Kara Walker, Exodus of Confederates from Atlanta. Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War (Annotated), 2005. Offset lithography and silkscreen, 39 × 53 inches. Bottom: Kara Walker, Alabama Loyalists Greeting the Federal GunBoats. Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War (Annotated), 2005. Offset lithography and silkscreen, 39 × 53 inches. Artwork images © Kara Walker, courtesy of Museum Box.
Event
Kara Walker: Harper’s Pictorial History of the Civil War (Annotated)
On view from now through Sunday, December 29th
Admission to WAM’s galleries is always free and open to all.
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General operating support for Weisman Art Museum’s exhibitions and programs is generously provided by Ameriprise Financial, the Art and Martha Kaemmer Fund of HRK Foundation, and the KHR McNeely Family Fund, thanks to Kevin, Rosemary, and Hannah Rose McNeely.
This exhibition is organized by New Britain Museum of American Art and The Museum Box.
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Location
333 East River Road
Minneapolis, MN
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doitinnorth shop/share gallery
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