Kara Walker: Hyundai Commission
By (Author) Zadie Smith
Edited by Clara Kim
Tate Publishing
Tate Publishing
26th August 2020
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
History of art
Installation art
Exhibition catalogues and specific collections
700.92
Paperback
160
Width 850mm, Height 1200mm
In 2019 the Hyundai Commission will be undertaken by the American artist Kara Walker, whose works have featured prominently in exhibitions around the world since the mid-1990s. Walker is renowned for her candid explorations of race, gender, sexuality and violence, from drawings, prints, murals, shadow puppets and projections to large-scale sculptural installations. She is perhaps best known for her use of black cut-paper silhouetted figures, often referencing the history of slavery and the antebellum South in the United States through provocative and elaborate installations.
Documenting the conception and creation of this latest commission, this publication includes intriguing images of work in process in the artist's studio as well as striking photographs of the final installation. In an eloquent text, Walker also introduces a personal selection of the archival images and artworks that have influenced her during the genesis of this work.
Clara Kim is The Daskalopoulos Senior Curator, International Art (Africa, Asia & Middle East).
Zadie Smith is a contemporary English author. A novelist, essayist and short story writer, she is one of the most critically respected and popular writers of her generation, whose novels White Teeth, NW and On Beauty have won numerous prizes. She is currently a professor of fiction at New York University and a Member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.