LAYLAH ALI.303 GALLERY Laylah All's latest "Greenhead green·head n. A male mallard duck. " paintings, on view recently in the young Boston-based artist's first solo show in New York, look spare and cool with their blue backgrounds and cartoony figures in gouache gouache (gwäsh): see watercolor painting. gouache Opaque watercolour. Also known as poster paint, designer's colour, and body colour, it differs from transparent watercolour in that the pigments are bound by liquid glue, which is on paper. The almost identical Greenheads, each with bulging white eyes, a thin brown body, and an oversize, round, dark-green head, make mechanical gestures: They wave their thin arms, run in a row, or offer objects to one another. Like superheroes Superheroes are fictional heroes who possess abilities beyond those of normal human beings. Superheroes may also refer to:
In one painting (all works Untitled, 2000), a Greenhead forces another--whose forearms and right leg are missing--to observe three figures hanging from nooses. Tiny round Band-Aids dot their bare chests. One hanging figure holds an amputated leg, complete with sneakered foot, in his clawlike hand; another holds a belt; the third an arm--all of which seem to belong to the observer of the group lynching. This figure wears an expression that is at once quizzical quiz·zi·cal adj. 1. Suggesting puzzlement; questioning. 2. Teasing; mocking: "His face wore a somewhat quizzical almost impertinent air" Lawrence Durrell. and horrified hor·ri·fy tr.v. hor·ri·fied, hor·ri·fy·ing, hor·ri·fies 1. To cause to feel horror. See Synonyms at dismay. 2. To cause unpleasant surprise to; shock. . Is the act of witness some kind of history lesson, perhaps a terrible punishment? Does our own witness to the painting implicate us somehow? In another work, four Greenheads in white uniforms and tall, conical white hats stand in a row. The outfits suggest both the pomp and ceremony of Catholic ritual and the banal evil of the Ku Klux Klan Ku Klux Klan (k ' klŭks klăn), designation mainly given to two distinct secret societies that played a part in American history, although other less important groups have also used . The figures on
the right hold out a disembodied head to the figures on the left; the
head seems about to speak. Is this an offering of some kind to colonial
newcomers or evidence of an atrocity? Like t he grimacing head, the
paintings won't say.
Ali's work is more enigmatic and subtle than that of other African American artists who use a vocabulary of historical stereotypes--Kara Walker's silhouettes, say, or Michael Ray Charles's "mammies," or even Ellen Gallagher's scribblings of "black" images in the spaces of her Minimalist compositions. It is precisely their enigmatic subtlety that makes All's paintings shocking and effective. The small, delicately painted Greenheads are not easily identifiable as white or black, male or female, even oppressor OPPRESSOR. One who having public authority uses it unlawfully to tyrannize over another; as, if he keep him in prison until he shall do something which he is not lawfully bound to do. 2. To charge a magistrate with being an oppressor, is therefore actionable. or victim, yet the scenarios point to a particular American history of oppression and its residue, which the viewer must draw on to complete the narrative circuit. Still, there is a deeply personal feel to the work, which complicates the broadly historical narrative. In several paintings, Greenhead "children" are stuck inside the stretched-out uniforms of the "parents" who hold them, as if shackled to the same fate: Parents and children are crying and gesticulating ges·tic·u·late v. ges·tic·u·lat·ed, ges·tic·u·lat·ing, ges·tic·u·lates v.intr. To make gestures especially while speaking, as for emphasis. v.tr. To say or express by gestures. , trying to communicate something urgent but obscure. The exhibition included two particularly small paintings of single figures. Like soliloquies in action-filled dramas, these works had the effect of highlighting the isolation and emotional turbulence of particular characters. A Greenhead stands in red-striped underpants, wearing a hood (in "Caucasian" flesh tones) that covers his head and face except for his eyes and oversize nostrils. Little hairs grow out of the hood, as if it were permanently affixed af·fix tr.v. af·fixed, af·fix·ing, af·fix·es 1. To secure to something; attach: affix a label to a package. 2. to his head. In one hand, the figure holds a looped belt. Is he a hangman HANGMAN. The name usually given to a man employed by the sheriff to put a man to death, according to law, in pursuance of a judgment of a competent court, and lawful warrant. The same as executioner. (q.v.) or the condemned? Which are "we"? |
|
||||||||||||||||||||

' klŭks klăn)
Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion