SCAD-Atlanta and the National Black Arts Festival present newly commissioned work
by Carrie Mae Weems
ATLANTA
-- Contemporary artist Carrie Mae Weems explores the human rights movement in the United States and abroad in an upcoming
multimedia installation titled, "Constructing History: A Requiem to Mark the Moment." The exhibition, commissioned
by the Savannah College of Art and Design and the National Black Arts Festival, will be on display July 1-Aug. 31 at the ACA
Gallery of SCAD, 1280 Peachtree St.
In a Feb. 29 New York Times review, art critic Roberta
Smith wrote of Weems, "No American photographer of the last quarter-century … has turned out a more probing, varied
and moving body of work. None has made more adventurous use of the photographic medium, adding performance, film and installation
to the serial print format."
In Winter 2008, Weems taught an innovative special topics course at SCAD-Atlanta
as a Distinguished Visiting Faculty member. She and her students conceptualized, planned and created the commissioned
"Constructing History" film and a related series of photographs. The human rights-focused project was inspired by
the 40th anniversary of the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
Drawing on archival films and media, Weems
worked with SCAD students, the National Black Arts Festival and other volunteers to reenact significant historical moments.
Participants created props and costumes, designed sets, coordinated production, and acted in vignettes, which were captured
on film and serve as the basis for the installation.
Weems said, "Through the act of performance, with our
own bodies, we are allowed to experience and to connect the historical past to the present-to the now, to the moment. By inhabiting
the moment, we live the experience; we stand in the shoes of others and come to know first-hand what is often only imagined,
lost, forgotten."
The civil rights movement in the United States helped spawn global concern for human rights.
Race and gender issues continue to resonate in the American political arena as, for the first time, a woman and a black man
vie for the Democratic nomination for president. The international spotlight on their campaigns, as well as ongoing human
rights violations throughout the world, makes Weems' installation particularly timely.
Weems, who received
the 2008 Skowhegan Medal for photography, earned a Bachelor of Arts from the California Institute of the Arts and a Master
of Fine Arts from the University of California, San Diego. She studied folklore at the University of California, Berkeley,
with the late Alan Dundes, and has been an artist in residence at The Art Institute of Chicago, The Fabric Workshop and the
Rhode Island School of Design. Weems' work is included in public and private collections around the world, including the
Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Fine Arts Houston, the Museum of Modern Art and the Williams College Museum of Art.
She lives and works in New York.
The "Constructing History: A Requiem to Mark the Moment" commission
was made possible by the Savannah College of Art and Design with the National Black Arts Festival.
Source: The Savannah College of Art and Design