PORTLAND, ORE.- The first comprehensive retrospective of Robert Colescott, one of Americas most compelling and provocative artists, opened at the
Portland Art Museum in Oregon on February 15, 2020. Bringing together 70 works spanning over 50 years of Colescotts prolific career, Art and Race Matters: The Career of Robert Colescott explores the work of an artist who through vibrant paintings laced with biting satireconfronted issues of race, gender, identity, and the uncomfortable realities of American life in the latter half of the 20th century.
Organized by the Contemporary Arts Center in Cincinnati and co-curated by noted Colescott scholar Lowery Stokes Sims and Matthew Weseley, Art and Race Matters will remain on view at the Portland Art Museum through May 17, 2020. Following its presentation in Portland, the exhibition will travel to the Chicago Cultural Center and the Akron Art Museum.
Robert Colescott (1925-2009) established his career in Portland with the support of gallery owner and philanthropist Arlene Schnitzer, then made his mark on the art scene in the 1970s with paintings that deconstructed well-known masterpieces of art history (such as Pablo Picassos 1907 Les Demoiselles dAvignon in the Museum of Modern Art, which Colescott painted in 1985) by black-facing some of the female figures.
This provocative strategy challenged longstanding taboos about racial stereotyping while allowing Colescott to achieve his stated purpose to interject blacks into art history, said co-curator Sims. As he transformed familiar images to forge new, unexplored social meanings and implications, Colescott became a pioneer in the reemergence of figuration in the 1970s and in the strategies of appropriation in the 1980s.
Known for satirical figurative paintings that expose the ugly ironies of race in America, Colescott worked at the vanguard of the resurgence of figuration in art starting in the 1970s, which marked the emergence of post-modernist thought. He infused his works with narrative, humor, and cultural criticism long before it became common for artists to do so. Through his subversive appropriation of existing imagery from pop culture, mass media, and the art historical canon, Colescott reclaimed racist stereotypes and lampooned prevalent mythologies about blackness.
Art and Race Matters invites a renewed examination of the artist, whose work is still as challenging, provocative, and relevant now as it was when he burst onto the art scene over five decades ago. Presenting works from across Colescotts career, the exhibition traces the progression of his stylistic development and the impact of place on his practice, revealing the diversity and range of his oeuvre: from his adaptations of Bay Area Figuration in the 1950s and 60s, to his signature graphic style of the 1970s, and the dense, painterly figuration of his later work. Art and Race Matters also explores prevalent themes in Colescotts work, including the complexities of identity, societal standards of beauty, the reality of the American Dream, and the role of the artist as arbiter and witness in contemporary life.
Colescotts work has never been more relevant than at this moment, noted Sims. Given the crisis of race relations, image management, and political manipulation in the current Americanindeed the globallandscape. Colescotts perspectives on race, life, social mores, historical heritage and cultural hybridity allow us a meansif we are up to the taskto forthrightly confront what the state of world culture will be in the next decade.
Art and Race Matters is the first complete survey of Colescotts work since his mid-career retrospective in 1987. It also builds upon the 10-year selection (1987-1996) that formed the artists representation of the United States at the 1997 Venice Biennale, and a presentation of work from the following decade of his career (1997-2007) that was organized by Meridian Gallery in San Francisco in 2007.