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Forget It,

1991

Adrian Piper, American, born 1948
Printed at Campbell Photo and Printing Service, Inc.
Published by Brody's Gallery
2006-321
Piper is an African American conceptual and performance artist who foregrounds issues of race and gender in her art. In this print, Piper combines photographs taken for the New York Times and Black Star agency with an application for a credit card to create an image that is hypersexualized and politically charged. The print is similar to Piper’s other early 1990s works, in which she superimposed red-lettered captions such as the enigmatic "Forget It" onto news photographs and included drawings of the three wise monkeys who advocate, "see no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil." These textual messages add complexity to the visual representation of an African American man trapped behind an application for credit.

Information

Title
Forget It
Dates

1991

Maker
Medium

Color photo-offset lithograph

Dimensions

27.2 × 54 cm (10 11/16 × 21 1/4 in.)

Credit Line

Gift of James Kraft, Class of 1957

Object Number
2006-321
Place Made

North America, United States, Washington, D.C.

Inscription

Signed and numbered in graphite, verso, lower right: Adrian Piper 46//100

Marks/Labels/Seals

Artist's stamp in red on verso, lower left: ADRIAN PIPER / forget it, 1991© / photo credits: / HOWARD BEACH, John Sotomayor / NEW YORK TIMES / SOMALIAN MOTHER AND CHILD, Peter Turnley / BLACK STAR / printer: Campbell Photo and Printing Service, Inc. / publisher: Brody's Gallery, Washington DC

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