PITTSBURGH, PA.- Lynn Zelevansky, The Henry J. Heinz II Director at
Carnegie Museum of Art, announced today the major acquisition of a new painting by Kerry James Marshall, Untitled (Gallery) (2016).
Marshall, one of the greatest living painters in America today, is best known for his decades-long commitment to reinserting the black figure into the canon of Western art history. This acquisition represents an important development in CMOAs relationship with the artist. For the 1999 Carnegie International, Marshall produced RYTHM MASTR, a multipart comic strip published in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette that was used to paper over display case windows at the museum. At the time, Marshalls work did not enter the collection, so this acquisition fills a gap in CMOAs holdings, while also reflecting on the legacy of the International.
Untitled (Gallery) depicts a single female figure posing as if for a snapshot against the white wall of a gallery lined with framed black-and-white photographs. Spotlights illuminate the artworks, creating concentric rings of light on the wall. Beside the figure hangs a photograph of a nude woman lying on a bearskin rug in front of a fireplacea familiar pinup trope but also a reference to glamorous 1930s Hollywood production stills. The juxtaposition prompts a host of questions: Is the subject of the painting also the subject of the photograph? Is she the artist? The curator or perhaps the gallerist? In addition to its many possible interpretations, Marshalls painting demonstrates his mastery of the medium and his encyclopedic knowledge of its history at each turn.
Since the early 1980s, Marshalls powerful works have asserted the black figure emphatically in the history and language of Western painting, says Eric Crosby, CMOAs Richard Armstrong Curator of Modern and Contemporary Art. Untitled (Gallery) will resonate across the Carnegies collection from Old Master paintings to contemporary works, offering visitors a new point of entry into that history.
Marshalls paintings, which range from intimate imagined portraits to ambitious historical scenes, reference the mediums past from the Renaissance forward, all the while chronicling the African American experience in the present. Born in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1955 and raised in Los Angeles, he is currently being honored with a touring retrospective co-organized by the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, and the Los Angeles Museum of Contemporary Art. He lives and works in Chicago.
Untitled (Gallery) makes its CMOA debut on July 15, 2017, when it will be featured in the exhibition 20/20: The Studio Museum in Harlem/Carnegie Museum of Art. In a unique collaboration, CMOAs Eric Crosby and the Studio Museums Amanda Hunt present selections from their respective collections in dialogue, shaping a vital conversation through the voices of artists about the polarizing issues of race and economic inequality in America today. Featuring 20 artists from each collection, 20/20 also suggests a test of our collective vision, as museums across the nation reconsider their relevance to local communities and rethink their collecting practices in light of marginalized art histories.