Carrie Mae Weems

Carrie Mae Weems, 1953-

Book - 2020

"Since the 1980s, the artist Carrie Mae Weems has challenged the status of the black female body within the complex social fabric of American society. Her photographic work probes various spaces from the American kitchen table, to the historical archives of the Hampton School, to the ancient landscapes of Rome. Tugging at established roots of power that perpetuate violence and injustice, Weems's photographic portraits of her muse have not only become iconic, but she has become a rallying voice for change through her engaged performances, video work, and convenings. This October Files volume brings together critical essays and interviews that explore Weems's work, shedding light on her interventions in the fields of photograph...y, African American art, and the institutions that shape the field of art history at large. Essays by Deborah Willis, Erina Duganne, Sarah Lewis, Robin Kelsey, Katori Hall, Salamishah Tillet, Dawoud Bey, and Jennifer Blessing that probe the underpinnings of photographic history in Weems's work, primarily focusing on her earliest series from the 1980s and 1990s, including The Kitchen Table series. Texts by Yxta Maya Murray, Kimberly Juanita Brown, and Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw that reconsider how Weems engages the photographic archive as in From Here I Saw What Happened series, historical spaces in Roaming and The Louisiana Project, or the legacy of critical aesthetic concepts like the sublime in art history. Engaging beyond the art object, Huey Copeland, Coco Fusco, and Thomas Lax consider Weems's impact of the space of her exhibitions by making connections between installed work and the institutions. Interviews also operate as a critical form of analysis for Weems's body of work, so we have included a variety of more-recent interviews with fellow photographer Dawoud Bey, MET social media manager Kimberly Drew, and acclaimed Curator Thelma Golden, among others. These essays not only provide a clear glimpse at the writing on Weems, but also indicate numerous horizons on how to interpret her work for future scholars"--

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Subjects
Published
Cambridge, Massachusetts : The MIT Press [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Carrie Mae Weems, 1953- (-)
Physical Description
xviii, 202 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations (some color) ; 23 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN
9780262043762
9780262538596
  • Acknowledgments
  • List of contributors
  • From here we saw what happened: Carrie Mae Weems and the practice of art history (2021) / Sarah Elizabeth Lewis
  • Specters of history (2014) / Huey Copeland
  • Diasporic landscapes of longing (1994) / bell hooks
  • Carrie Mae Weems (1996) / Coco Fusco
  • Compassion (2009) / Carrie Mae Weems
  • Carrie Mae Weems and the field (2021) / Sarah Elizabeth Lewis, Carrie Mae Weems, and Thelma Golden
  • Photographing between the lines: beauty, politics, and the poetic vision of Carrie Mae Weems (2012) / Deborah Willis
  • Foreword to Carrie Mae Weems: kitchen table series (2016) / Sarah Elizabeth Lewis
  • Around the kitchen table (2016) / Robin Kelsey, Katori Hall, Salamishah Tillet, Dawoud Bey, and Jennifer Blessing
  • Carrie Mae Weems's Convenings (2019) / Thomas J. Lax
  • Carrie Mae Weems: the legendary photographer on becoming and exploring personhood through art (2016) / Kimberly Drew
  • Family folktales: Carrie Mae Weems, Allan Sekula, and the critique of documentary photography / Erina Duganne
  • From here I saw what happened and I cried: Carrie Mae Weems's challenge to the Harvard Archive (2012) / Yxta Maya Murray
  • Carrie Mae Weems (2009) / Dawoud Bey
  • Photographic incantations of the visual (2015) / Kimberly Juanita Brown
  • The wandering gaze of Carrie Mae Weems's The Louisiana project (2018) / Gwendolyn DuBois Shaw
  • Public forum: "Pictures and progress" (2018) / Sarah Elizabeth Lewis, Carrie Mae Weems, José Rivera, and Jeremy McCarter
  • Index.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

African American studies and art history professor Lewis collects scholarly interviews and essays on the work of Carrie Mae Weems, with many reproductions of her photos and installations, in this outstanding "salute" to the myriad ways the boundary-pushing contemporary artist "irrevocably impacted the discipline of art history and the humanities." Weems was the first African-American artist awarded a dedicated solo show at New York's Guggenheim Museum in 2014, which combined photography, video, and text that probed cultural identity, class, and hegemony and exposed her drive "to recover and bring to the foreground subjugated knowledge." Weems's arguably most famous work, "Kitchen Table Series" (1990), "interweaves... a narrative of black female subjectivity, black beauty, and the gaze," writes MacArthur fellow Deborah Willis. Art historian Huey Copeland, meanwhile, characterizes a video installation, "Lincoln, Lonnie, and Me--A Story in Five Parts" (2012), as an immersion that treats "American history as a racialized theater of deadly repetition." Several in-depth conversations with Weems, including a dialogue with Thelma Golden, director of the Studio Museum in Harlem, hosted by Lewis, bring in the artist's perspective directly. Thoughtful, thorough, and timely, this scholarly yet accessible survey reveals Weems as a foundational, influential, and prescient figure. (May)Correction: An earlier version of this review misattributed a quote from Huey Copeland to Deborah Willis.

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Review by Library Journal Review

Renowned photographer and performer Carrie Mae Weems received her first camera as an 18-year-old Black dancer-turned-union organizer, and has since used photography to explore everyday life and ideas like the construction of beauty and the recognition of forgotten moments. This volume of essays, interviews, and art historical analysis gathers a portion of the existing scholarship about Weems and her body of work. Weems herself says that the discourse about her work has too often focused on themes of race while overlooking ideas about the function of beauty and cultural construction. There's a short bio for each of the monograph's contributors that clarifies their relation to the work and their authority to speak on the subject. This book reproduces many images from Weems's multimedia series that combine photographs, text, and video), like the Kitchen Table Series (1990) and The Louisiana Project (2003). Her predominately black-and-white photography translates well to the page. VERDICT This is a well-researched, intriguing monograph about Weems that will be helpful to anyone researching her art and interesting to any reader who wants to think about the function and construction of beauty within society.--Bree Jennrich, Kirkwood P.L., MO

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