About The Work
Kwame Brathwaite, the Harlem photographer who helped popularize the clarion slogan “Black is beautiful,” was known as the “Keeper of the Images.” His pictures of Black models and musicians from the 1960s are essential documents that radiated from New York during an era of Black and African independence campaigns. Although known to scholars and archivists, Brathwaite’s work didn’t reach a wider audience until Aperture’s 2017 “Elements of Style” issue. As an elder statesman of the Black freedom movement, Brathwaite became the “keeper of the stories, too,” Tanisha C. Ford wrote. “If he didn’t share this history, it would be lost to time.” The artist Hank Willis Thomas is also a keeper of the images. “Sometimes I see myself as a visual-culture archaeologist or DJ,” he explains. “All of my work is about framing and context.” In this series of collages, which reference traditional quilt patterning, Thomas draws on stories from Aperture in the 2010s, a decade during which looking back was as vital as looking forward. He sets in kaleidoscopic motion an energetic range of associations and styles: Joel Meyerowitz’s stately portraits from Provincetown in the era before AIDS and Nick Sethi’s dizzying chronicle of a festival for a transgender community in India; Renée Cox’s self-portraits about power and Dave Swindells’s endless nights on London’s dance floors. Revivifying history, remixing the present. Thomas sees these collages as a collaboration with peers and mentors he’s long admired. “The process of weaving these images has been revelatory,” he says. “Through this blending, I was able to engage more intimately with the images, the subject matter, and the journey of the image maker.” This special limited-edition print is from a series of works commissioned for Aperture magazine #248: “The 70th Anniversary Issue”.
Courtesy of Aperture
About Hank Willis Thomas
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Hank Willis Thomas releases new Artspace and For Freedoms edition Twilight's Last Gleaming, 2024
- Interviews & Features: Art for Democracy: Bid or Buy Now
- Art 101: "What I'd Buy This December:" Artspace's Advisor Hannah Parker Shares the Artworks in Her Cart
- Interviews & Features: Hank Willis Thomas's Reflective Protest Images Illuminate Overlooked Histories—And the Hyper-Consumption of Photography Today
- Interviews & Features: Let This Be Your Guide: 7 Famous Artists Describe Their Favorite Artworks at The Met
Pigment Print
30.00 x 23.75 in
76.2 x 60.3 cm
This work is signed and numbered by the artist.
About The Work
Kwame Brathwaite, the Harlem photographer who helped popularize the clarion slogan “Black is beautiful,” was known as the “Keeper of the Images.” His pictures of Black models and musicians from the 1960s are essential documents that radiated from New York during an era of Black and African independence campaigns. Although known to scholars and archivists, Brathwaite’s work didn’t reach a wider audience until Aperture’s 2017 “Elements of Style” issue. As an elder statesman of the Black freedom movement, Brathwaite became the “keeper of the stories, too,” Tanisha C. Ford wrote. “If he didn’t share this history, it would be lost to time.” The artist Hank Willis Thomas is also a keeper of the images. “Sometimes I see myself as a visual-culture archaeologist or DJ,” he explains. “All of my work is about framing and context.” In this series of collages, which reference traditional quilt patterning, Thomas draws on stories from Aperture in the 2010s, a decade during which looking back was as vital as looking forward. He sets in kaleidoscopic motion an energetic range of associations and styles: Joel Meyerowitz’s stately portraits from Provincetown in the era before AIDS and Nick Sethi’s dizzying chronicle of a festival for a transgender community in India; Renée Cox’s self-portraits about power and Dave Swindells’s endless nights on London’s dance floors. Revivifying history, remixing the present. Thomas sees these collages as a collaboration with peers and mentors he’s long admired. “The process of weaving these images has been revelatory,” he says. “Through this blending, I was able to engage more intimately with the images, the subject matter, and the journey of the image maker.” This special limited-edition print is from a series of works commissioned for Aperture magazine #248: “The 70th Anniversary Issue”.
Courtesy of Aperture
About Hank Willis Thomas
From The Magazine
- Interviews & Features: Hank Willis Thomas releases new Artspace and For Freedoms edition Twilight's Last Gleaming, 2024
- Interviews & Features: Art for Democracy: Bid or Buy Now
- Art 101: "What I'd Buy This December:" Artspace's Advisor Hannah Parker Shares the Artworks in Her Cart
- Interviews & Features: Hank Willis Thomas's Reflective Protest Images Illuminate Overlooked Histories—And the Hyper-Consumption of Photography Today
- Interviews & Features: Let This Be Your Guide: 7 Famous Artists Describe Their Favorite Artworks at The Met
Edition of 6 + 3 AP
- The quoted dimensions are the image size. Paper size: 26 x 32 inches.
- Ships in 10 to 14 business days from New York. Framed works ship in 14 to 18 business days from New York.
- This work is final sale and not eligible for return.
- Questions about this work?
- Interested in other works by this artist or other artists? We will source them for you.
- Want to pay in installments?
Contact an Artspace Advisor
advisor@artspace.com