Faith Ringgold: American People

Faith Ringgold: American People

New Museum

Faith Ringgold, American People Series #18: The Flag Is Bleeding, 1967. Oil on canvas, 72 x 96 inches. National Gallery of Art, Washington, Patrons’ Permanent Fund and Gift of Glenstone Foundation. © Faith Ringgold / ARS, NY and DACS, London. Courtesy of ACA Galleries, New York 2022. 

February 15, 2022
Faith Ringgold
American People
February 17–June 5, 2022
New Museum
235 Bowery
New York, NY 10002
USA
www.newmuseum.org

The New Museum presents the first full retrospective in New York of the art of Faith Ringgold (b. 1930, New York, NY). Bringing together over 50 years of work, Faith Ringgold: American People provides the most comprehensive assessment to date of Ringgold’s impactful vision. Her role as an artist, author, educator, and organizer has made her a key figure whose work links the multi-disciplinary achievements of the Harlem Renaissance to the political art of young Black artists working today.

During the 1960s, Ringgold created some of the most indelible art of the civil rights era by melding her own unique style of figurative painting with a bold, transformative approach to the language of protest. In subsequent decades, she challenged accepted hierarchies of art and craft through her experimental quilt paintings and undertook a deeply studied reimagining of art history to produce narratives that bear witness to the complexity of the American experience.

This exhibition will feature works from across Ringgold’s best-known series, tracking the development of her figurative style and thematic vision as they evolved and expanded to meet the urgency of the political and social changes taking place in America during her lifetime. The first section of the exhibition will provide an extensive look at Ringgold’s early paintings, including the American People and Black Light series. Using what the artist described as a “super-realist” visual language, Ringgold captured the racial and gender divisions in 1960s American society with searing insight. Her three large-scale “murals”—including the celebrated American People Series #20: Die (1967), recently juxtaposed with Pablo Picasso’s Les Demoiselles d’Avignon at The Museum of Modern Art and American People Series #18: The Flag is Bleeding, which was recently acquired by the National Gallery of Art—will be shown together for the first time in New York since 1984. They will be presented alongside her iconic political posters, which advocated for collective causes like support for the Black Panther Party and freeing activist Angela Davis, and photographs and ephemera related to Ringgold’s extensive activist pursuits. Ringgold’s 1971 mural painting, For the Women’s House, created for the women’s prison at Rikers Island will also be on view.

The exhibition will also examine Ringgold’s embrace of non-Western and American craft traditions, including her performance objects and soft sculptures. A large selection of her early unstretched canvases adorned with sewn fabric borders, inspired by Tibetan thangkas, will also be displayed. These works demonstrate Ringgold’s attempts to transcend a predominately white art historical tradition to find forms more suitable for the radical exploration of gender and racial identity that her work would go on to enact. Although lesser known within Ringgold’s oeuvre, these canvases led directly to the creation of her celebrated story quilt paintings of the 1980s and 1990s.

Ringgold’s story quilts are some of the most influential artworks of the past fifty years. Drawing on both personal autobiography and collective histories, the story quilts point to larger social conditions and cultural transformations—from the Harlem Renaissance to the realities of Ringgold’s life as a working mother, artist, and activist. This retrospective includes a wide range of Ringgold’s quilts, including formative pieces created with her mother, important early series like The Bitter Nest and Change, selections from other notable bodies of work including The American Collection and Coming to Jones Road, and, in a landmark display, the first complete presentation of her series, The French Collection, in nearly twenty-five years.

The exhibition catalogue, co-published with Phaidon, will be the most significant collection of scholarship on Ringgold’s work to date, with contributions by curators, writers, and artists across generations, including Amiri Baraka, Diedrick Brackens, LeRonn Brooks, Julia Bryan-Wilson, Jordan Casteel, Bridget Cooks, Massimiliano Gioni, Mark Godfrey, Lucy Lippard, Tschabalala Self, Michele Wallace, and Zoé Whitley.

In summer 2022, Faith Ringgold: American People will make its West Coast debut at the de Young museum.

Faith Ringgold: American People is curated by Massimiliano Gioni, Edlis Neeson Artistic Director, and Gary Carrion-Murayari, Kraus Family Curator, with Madeline Weisburg, Curatorial Assistant.

In celebration of Faith Ringgold’s exhibition, the New Museum’s department of Education and Public Engagement is pleased to host a suite of in-person and virtual programming. There will be several virtual tours on Instagram, starting on February 23 with exhibition co-curator Gary Carrion-Murayari. Public Programming will include several panel discussions that expand and explore critical themes in Ringgold’s work. A series titled “On Faith” will gather artists, scholars, curators, and writers to consider the relationship between Faith Ringgold and Harlem, matrilineal art histories, and younger artists. There will also be a special Tour and Workshop for Educators in March, and a Family Day in May.

Also on view at the New Museum is Daniel Lie: Unnamed Entitiesa new commission by Indonesian-Brazilian artist Daniel Lie (b. 1988, São Paulo, Brazil), and the artist’s first solo exhibition in the United States. Since 2010, Lie has been using organic materials to create largescale pieces that simultaneously grow and decay. Unnamed Entities (2022) is an expansive installation created specifically for the Museum’s Lobby Gallery. The work incorporates traditional terracotta ceramic vases, jute hemp fabric, natural fiber ropes, straw hay bales, mud with spores and seeds, and thousands of cut flowers. These materials will evolve and transmutate throughout the exhibition as they rot, mold, sprout, and change shapes and hues in unpredictable ways. Daniel Lie: Unnamed Entities is curated by Bernardo Mosqueira, ISLAA Curatorial Fellow.

Joining these exhibitions is Screen Series: Patricia Domínguezpresenting three recent video works by the Chilean artist Patricia Domínguez that bring together the artist’s experimental research on ethnobotany, curative practices, mysticism, and the corporatization of wellbeing. Curated by Madeline Weisburg, Curatorial Assistant.

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