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Search resuls for: "Betye Saar"


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Betye Saar Remains Guided by the Spirit
  + stars: | 2024-05-08 | by ( Evan Nicole Brown | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
The American assemblage artist Betye Saar spent her childhood salvaging lost, discarded and forgotten things, like small glass beads, broken necklaces and scraps of colored paper left in trash bins or littering the ground where she walked. “My daughter Tracye calls me a hoarder who found her calling,” Saar says. Some of the objects that Saar collects have sat unused in her converted-garage studio for years before finding their way into one of her artworks. Saar considers this selection process to be a sacred one. “I’ve always felt that old objects hold a power,” she says.
Persons: Betye Saar, , Tracye, , “ I’ve, “ They’ve Organizations: Los Locations: Saar, Nigeria, Senegal, Mexico, Haiti, Brazil, Los Angeles, ” Saar
Grace Wales Bonner’s approach to fashion can sometimes feel more like that of an academic rather than a designer. Her collections for Wales Bonner, the brand she started in 2015, are informed by dazzlingly intensive research spanning critical theory, music, literature, history and mysticism. Her clever embrace of so many perspectives and personalities, and her proudly Afro-Atlantic approach to fashion, has made Ms. Wales Bonner, 33, an increasingly influential figure in field. This year, she began showing her collections in Paris, the creative and commercial epicenter of luxury fashion. But Ms. Wales Bonner is also a polymath with artistic ambitions outside fashion.
Persons: Grace Wales, Wales Bonner, Haile Selassie, James Baldwin, Theaster Gates, Man Ray, Alexander Calder, Moustapha Dimé, Terry Adkins Organizations: Adidas, Museum of Modern Art Locations: Harlem, Jamaica, Paris, New York, Betye Saar
Around the same time, Rosler began exploring video, which was then becoming popular among feminist artists as an affordable way to make and share work without the institutional support that was often denied them. This resulted in another of her best-known works, “Semiotics of the Kitchen” (1975). As her actions become increasingly violent — Rosler uses a manual juicer like she’s breaking a neck — the hostess’s rage takes on broader significance. “The fact that video sucked was part of what made it exciting,” Rosler told me; it allowed her to make work that no one would judge on its aesthetic qualities. It’s possible, even, to find echoes of Rosler in the amateur videography of TikTok, where every user is the head of their own surreal public access network.
Persons: Rosler, Mika Rottenberg, it’s, Carmen Herrera, Hilma af Klint Organizations: Rosler, Guggenheim Locations: Argentine Israeli, Saar, New York
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