-
Website
http://www.getentertainmental.com -
Original page
http://www.getentertainmental.com/2007/10/12/kara-walker-at-the-whitney-in-nyc/ -
Subscribe
All Comments -
Community
-
Top Commenters
-
hotelbooker
1 comment · 1 points
-
Avent Isis
1 comment · 2 points
-
Wholesale Clothing
1 comment · 2 points
-
Celebrity Sunglasses
1 comment · 1 points
-
Vitamins
1 comment · 1 points
-
-
Popular Threads
--Betye Saar, African American artist
"What is troubling and complicates the matter is that Walker's words in published interviews mock African Americans and Africans...She has said things such as 'All black people in America want to be slaves a little bit.'...Walker consciously or unconsciously seems to be catering to the bestial fantasies about blacks created by white supremacy and racism."
--Howardena Pindell, African American artist, at the Johannesburg Biennale, October 1997.
All black people in America want to be slaves a little bit.
--Kara Walker, as quoted by Jerry Saltz in a 1996 FlashArt piece
Her blacks don't resist aggression, or at least not in obvious ways. They seem to give in to it, let themselves be abjectly used, often by one another.
--2003 NYT article by Holland Carter
Kara Walker is not presenting a heightened reality of American slavery. Blackness is a concept that Kara Walker objectively debases. These images are visualizations of what Toni Morrison describes as the white subconscious Playing in the Dark. As such, they are a reflection of the psychosis of white supremacy. However, it is not a full critique of this mindset and may in fact justify this mindset. It is my opinion that she rationalizes and projects in her work, the psychosis of the white male mindset, without the guilt, in fact with total acceptence.