San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

SCULPTOR WILL BE 1ST BLACK WOMAN TO REPRESENT U.S. AT BIENNALE

- BY WILLIAM J. KOLE Kole writes for The Associated Press.

Simone Leigh is renowned for creating artworks that transcend race and gender to celebrate Black women and give them a voice. Now she’s sculpting her way into history.

She’ll be the first Black woman to represent the U.S. at the prestigiou­s Venice Biennale arts festival, according to the State Department’s Bureau of Educationa­l and Cultural Affairs and Boston’s Institute of Contempora­ry Art.

Leigh, who lives in New York City and gives interviews infrequent­ly, declined to comment — but it’s clear that the national reckoning with racial injustice has been on her mind.

“I’m so looking forward to a respite from this climate we are living through,” she said in a recent Instagram post.

The Chicago native is creating a new series of sculptures for the U.S. pavilion at the 59th Biennale to be held in 2022, said the Boston museum, which is organizing a major exhibition of Leigh’s work to be displayed in 2023.

Leigh originally was to appear at next year’s Biennale, but the coronaviru­s pandemic prompted organizers to delay the 2021 edition by a year, Institute of Contempora­ry Art spokespers­on Margaux Leonard said.

“At such a crucial moment in history, I can think of no better artist to represent the United States,” ICA director Jill Medvedow said in a statement.

“Over the course of two decades, Simone Leigh has created an indelible body of work that centers the experience­s and histories of Black women,” she said, calling Leigh’s work “probing, timely and urgent.”

Founded in 1895, the every-other-year Biennale has become a leading venue for artists worldwide to call attention to war, racism, poverty, human traffickin­g and other issues preoccupyi­ng the planet.

Eva Respini, the ICA’S chief curator, said Leigh’s sculptures for the Biennale will highlight Black feminist thought, include works inspired by leading Black intellectu­als, and serve as “a beacon in our moment.”

Leigh, 53, is known for edgy, bold forms that draw from themes in African art. “Brick House,” her 16-foottall bronze bust of a Black woman with braids, is currently installed on Manhattan’s elevated High Line greenway.

 ?? MICHELLE GUSTAFSON THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Artist Simone Leigh working on her 16-foot-tall sculpture “Brick House.”
MICHELLE GUSTAFSON THE NEW YORK TIMES Artist Simone Leigh working on her 16-foot-tall sculpture “Brick House.”

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