Currently not on view

Untitled: Four Etchings,

1992

Glenn Ligon, born 1960, Bronx, NY; active New York
2011-27 a-d
One of the most important contemporary artists working today, Glenn Ligon first came to promi­nence in the late 1980s. Race, homosexuality, prejudice, and stereotypes constitute his primary subject matter, while quotation is one of his primary strategies. Untitled: Four Etchings is related formally, thematically, and historically to the work for which he is best known: oil-stick and coal dust "paintings" from the early to mid-1990s. Comprised of two black-on-black and two black-on-white prints, the work triggers a play between legibility and illegibility, presence and absence, visibility and erasure, and white and black that operates simultaneously on many different levels. Excerpts from the writing of two African American authors anchor the work. On the black-on-white prints, Ligon repeats two sentences from Zora Neale Hurston’s essay "How It Feels to Be Colored Me" (1928); on the black-on-black prints, he quotes a single passage from the prologue to Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man (1952). The struggle to read these texts mirrors the struggle of the "I" to assert itself; more specifically, it evokes the struggle of the African American "I" to claim its agency, voice, and worth. This struggle is not the characters’ or the authors’ alone: as a gay African American man, Ligon bears the burden of non- or mis-recognition as well.

More Context

Special Exhibition

More About This Object

Information

Title
Untitled: Four Etchings
Dates

1992

Maker
Medium
Soft-ground etching, aquatint, spit bite, and sugar-lift
Dimensions
plate (each): 50.9 × 40.3 cm (20 1/16 × 15 7/8 in.) sheet (each): 63.5 × 44.5 cm (25 × 17 1/2 in.) frame (each): 73.7 × 54.3 × 4.8 cm (29 × 21 3/8 × 1 7/8 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase, Laura P. Hall Memorial Fund
Object Number
2011-27 a-d
Place Made

North America, United States

Signatures
Signed and dated, lower right: Glenn Ligon '92
Inscription
Inscribed and numbered, lower left: A.P. 10//10
Culture