Kinship
By (Author) Dorothy Moss
By (author) Leslie Urea
By (author) Robyn Asleson
Text by Tana Caragol
Text by Charlotte Ickes
Hirmer Verlag
Hirmer Verlag
5th January 2023
Germany
General
Non Fiction
Portraits and self-portraiture in art
Photographs: collections
709.22
Hardback
120
Width 178mm, Height 229mm
540g
Recent events have pushed artists to visualize ideas of closeness in a new light. Kinship, published on the occasion of the National Portrait Gallery's tenth "Portraiture Now" exhibition, features the work of eight leading contemporary artists who explore familial relationships through photography, painting, sculpture, and performance.
Contemporary portraiture offers a way to consider the mutable yet enduring qualities of familial relationships and the internal and external forces that affect our bonds with others. For example, interpretations of distance - whether emotional, physical, or geographical - have recently become more fraught. By recognizing the transformations that occur in the genre of portraiture and the threads that today's portraits share, we can better understand the universality and specificity of kinship.
List of artists: Njideka Akunyili Crosby, Jess T. Dugan, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Jessica Todd Harper, Thomas Holton, Sedrick Huckaby, Anna Tsouhlarakis
"Kinship. . . asks a critical question: What is kinship in the United States today, and how is it evolving . . . Throughout, the book communicates a sense of kinship as meaning more than blood, but the subjects in focus are largely blood relations. The word 'kin' indeed comes from a Proto-Indo-European word meaning 'to give birth to, ' and the artists grapple with the tensions therein, where perhaps the expectations of genetic kinship heighten family tensions and dysfunction over the course of decades."-- "Hyperallergic"
Dorothy Moss, Curator of Painting and Sculpture, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, and coordinating Curator of the Smithsonian American Women's History Initiative.
Leslie Urea, Curator of Photographs, National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution.