Los Angeles Times

‘Act of Power’ and beyond

Deborah Roberts’ first L.A. exhibition employs collage and text to look at black female identity

- By Sharon Mizota calendar@latimes.com

Deborah Roberts explores the weight of expectatio­ns but also strength that comes with individual­ity, in L.A. show, above.

Deborah Roberts’ black girls are beautiful in their incongruit­y. The artist from Austin, Texas, has her first exhibition in L.A. at the Luis De Jesus gallery, and the collage and text works explore preteen awkwardnes­s and the syncretic nature of black female identity. The images celebrate what it means to contain multitudes.

Their most obvious precedent is the collage work of Romare Bearden, who documented African American life in the 1960s in dynamic compositio­ns that channeled the energy of music. Roberts’ portraits also feel musical, incorporat­ing bold prints, bright colors and dramatic shifts in scale and perspectiv­e, but her eclecticis­m is much quieter. Her girls appear isolated on white grounds, the center of attention.

Most of them gaze out at the viewer, although their visages are amalgams of several faces. In “Political Lamb #3,” the girl gazes in two directions: one eye trained on us, the other in profile. Two of her four arms hold a numbered card up to her chest, as in a mug shot. The gravity of this detail belies the perky bows in her braided hair.

The arms and hands of older women appear throughout.

In “Here Before, Here After,” a sweet girl wearing a tiara has hands that are startlingl­y wrinkled and gnarled, suggesting wisdom beyond her years. The outstretch­ed, outsized hand in “The Step Back” is also clearly a grown-up’s. The subject’s other hand is clad in a bright red boxing glove. These girls, incorporat­ing the experience of their elders, are not to be messed with.

Eclecticis­m also appears in text works that are simply lists of names. Monikers like “Sharkesha,” “Raeschell” and “Shonique” fuse and twist various linguistic traditions in the same way as the collages. They are creative refusals to be contained by any one culture or category.

Roberts’ works capture perfectly what it feels like to have assumption­s and expectatio­ns foisted on you, to feel like a collection of pieces instead of a person.

If you are lucky, you will also be buoyed and strengthen­ed by the traces of those who came before, in the creation of someone unpreceden­ted.

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Luis De Jesus Los Angeles
 ?? Luis De Jesus Los Angeles ?? A COLLECTION of collage works included in the exhibition “Deborah Roberts: Fragile but Fixable.”
Luis De Jesus Los Angeles A COLLECTION of collage works included in the exhibition “Deborah Roberts: Fragile but Fixable.”
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