Saturday, June 4, 2011

The Art of Kara Walker

Still from video installation "…calling to me from the angry surface of some grey and threatening sea, I was transported", Kara Walker
Kara Walker is a prolific, contemporary, American artist who creates work "depicting  historical narratives haunted by sexuality, violence, and subjugation  but made using the genteel 18th-century art of cut-paper silhouettes.  Set in the American South before the Civil War, Walker’s compositions  play off stereotypes to portray, often grotesquely, life on the  plantation, where masters and mistresses and slave men, women, and  children enact a subverted version of the past in an attempt to  reconfigure their status and representation"

Does it remind you of Gone with the wind? Not only do I find that period of time fascinating but I find myself enchanted by the work of Kara Walker because of the seemingly innocent and playful nature of the images that draw you in. On closer inspection you realise the sinister and haunting undertones of the work. Some of Walker's work remind's me of early Disney cartoons (Darkytown Rebellion and Mistress demanded swift and dramatic empathetic reaction which we obliged her) so easy to look at and they feel fun. How wrong we are.
 

Excavated from the Black Heart of a Negress, 2002, Kara Walker
 "Over the years the Kara Walker has used drawing, painting, colored-light  projections, writing, shadow puppetry, and, most recently, film  animation to narrate her tales of romance, sadism, oppression, and  liberation.  Walker’s scenarios thwart conventional readings of a  cohesive national history and expose the collective, and ongoing,  psychological injury caused by the tragic legacy of slavery. Her work  leads viewers through an aesthetic experience that evokes a critical  understanding of the past and proposes an examination of contemporary  racial and gender stereotypes" 




Darkytown Rebellion, 2001, Kara Walker
Detail from My Complement, My Enemy, My Oppressor, My Love Video Still, 2004, Kara Walker
The Battle of Atlanta, 1995, Kara Walker
Untitled, 1995Kara Walker
Untitled ("Hunting Scenes"), 2001, Kara Walker
Mistress demanded swift and dramatic empathetic reaction which we obliged her, 2000, Kara Walker

 If you are interested in the art of Kara Walker, check out this clip on the artist and more of her work - amazingly inspiring!
 
 

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