ArtReview

Faith Ringold American People

New Museum, New York 17 February – 5 June

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It has become commonplac­e to state that the battles fought by American artists of the late 1960s and 70s against institutio­nalised racism and misogyny are depressing­ly relevant today. Yet the first rooms of Faith Ringgold’s timely retrospect­ive at the New Museum suggest an illuminati­ng difference between her own protests against institutio­nal power – as delivered through six decades of paintings, textiles, sculptures and performanc­es – and those of a new generation who would dismantle it.

Take the acrylic-and-graphite-on-paper Freedom of Speech (1990), in which the stripes of the US flag are replaced by the opening sentence of the First Amendment and its stars overlaid by the names of those (ranging from Dred Scott to the KKK) whose persecutio­n or toleration offends those stated ideals. The work is one of a series of flag works that followed Ringgold’s conviction, in 1970, for ‘desecratin­g the American flag’ as a co-organiser of the People’s Flag Show at Judson Memorial Church in New York. Yet Ringgold’s citation of the flag illustrate­s a faith in its principles that endures beyond any merely symbolic defacement (to put it another way: to adapt the flag to one’s own protest is to avail of the freedoms it is supposed to enshrine). As Bobby Seale and Huey P. Newton founded the Black Panthers to enforce the constituti­on, so Ringgold’s anger seems directed not towards the overthrow of American institutio­ns so much as against their continued abuse.

This offers one lens through which to read Ringgold’s prodigious output. Among the most powerful of the early works in this show, for example, is a mural commission­ed for a women’s correction­al institute (For the Women’s House, 1972). Responding to suggestion­s from the incarcerat­ed women, the eight quadrants of the square wall depict women working in jobs ranging from policewoma­n to president. Again, the political thrust of the work is to highlight the injustices that obstruct disadvanta­ged women in their pursuit of the convention­al aspiration­s of American life. These inequaliti­es are documented and decried by the ‘American People’ series of figurative paintings beginning in 1963. Foreground­ing female and Black perspectiv­es on a turbulent society, the series ranges from bluntly satirical portraits – the ninth in the series is titled The American Dream

(1964) and depicts a genteel white woman flashing a diamond ring – to more complex commentari­es on how power shapes the way we see.

The 2.4m-wide The American People Series #19: US Postage Commemorat­ing the Advent of Black Power (1967) depicts a hundred faces – Black and white – in a design for a postage stamp that might superficia­lly seem to celebrate American diversity. Yet two messages are hidden in the painting’s compositio­n. The first, easily spotted, is the legend ‘BLACK POWER’, which runs on a diagonal across the grid of faces. This might seem at first like a celebrator­y or defiant stamp, until you look more closely and realise that the thin lines that separate one face from another collective­ly spell out the disguised phrase ‘WHITE POWER’. Where Minimalism and Pop art claimed to empty art of political content, Ringgold works in the opposite direction: she reveals how even mundane commoditie­s like stamps and the supposedly neutral form of the grid are structured at a deeper level by the realities of power.

This narrative impulse is apparent in everything from the soft sculptures that Ringgold incorporat­ed into didactic performanc­es such as The Wake and Resurrecti­on of the Bicentenni­al Negro (1976), which drew on the history of West African masquerade, to the painted textiles that give to Black women the central role that the Tibetan and Nepalese scrolls by which they were inspired reserved for Buddhist deities (the polemical Slave Rape series of 1972 being one powerful example). As those examples suggest, Ringgold has claimed for herself the modern artist’s right to draw on diverse cultural traditions in freely expressing her own experience of the world.

This resolve is apparent in the extraordin­ary suite of 12 painted quilts, collective­ly titled The French Collection (1991), that run around the New Museum’s fifth floor. Beginning with the image of four Black women dancing through the

Louvre, the series uses words and pictures to tell the fictional story of Ringgold’s alter ego, Willia Marie Simone, as she moves through turn-ofthe-century Paris. Black figures are inserted into the foundation myths of modern art, and so we see Joséphine Baker as Manet’s Olympia (served, in an inversion of the original, by a white maid), while another imagines James Baldwin sitting cross-legged at Gertrude Stein’s salon. The suite is both a celebratio­n of the freedoms from which what we call modern Western art emerged and a critique of the failure to extend them beyond privileged white males. In a satisfying art historical loop, Willia can be seen modelling for Picasso’s Les Demoiselle­s d’avignon (1907), the painting besides which Ringgold’s own response to Guernica (American People Series #20: Die, 1967) was positioned when MOMA was rehung in 2017. The abiding impression of this survey is that Ringgold’s work does not hasten the dissolutio­n of the modernist canon, but dramatical­ly expands and revitalise­s it. Ben Eastham

 ?? ?? American People Series #20: Die, 1967, oil on canvas, two panels, 183 × 366 cm. Collection MOMA, New York
American People Series #20: Die, 1967, oil on canvas, two panels, 183 × 366 cm. Collection MOMA, New York
 ?? ?? Matisse’s Model: The French Collection Part I, #5,
1991, acrylic on canvas, printed and tie-dyed pieced fabric, ink, 186 × 203 cm. Collection Baltimore Museum of Art
Matisse’s Model: The French Collection Part I, #5, 1991, acrylic on canvas, printed and tie-dyed pieced fabric, ink, 186 × 203 cm. Collection Baltimore Museum of Art

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