Thursday, June 11, 2020

Aruna D'Souza | Whitewalling: Art, Race & Protest in 3 Acts




Aruna D'Souza
Whitewalling: Art, Race & Protest in 3 Acts
New York City, USA: Badlands Unlimited, 2018
160 pp., softcover
Edition size unknown


"In 2017, the Whitney Biennial included a painting by a white artist, Dana Schutz, of the lynched body of a young black child, Emmett Till. In 1979, anger brewed over a show at New York’s Artists Space entitled The Nigger Drawings. In 1969, the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s exhibition Harlem on My Mind did not include a single work by a black artist. In all three cases, black artists and writers and their allies organized vigorous responses using the only forum available to them: public protest.
Whitewalling: Art, Race & Protest in 3 Acts reflects on these three incidents in the long and troubled history of art and race in America. It lays bare how the art world—no less than the country at large—has persistently struggled with the politics of race, and the ways this struggle has influenced how museums, curators and artists wrestle with notions of free speech and the specter of censorship. Whitewalling takes a critical and intimate look at these three “acts” in the history of the American art scene and asks: when we speak of artistic freedom and the freedom of speech, who, exactly, is free to speak?"
—publisher's statement


Read Casey Beal's review of the book at Momus, here and Jennifer Szalai's review in the New York Times, here



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