Crocker Art Museum is open once again at 25% capacity w advance tickets. Go check out the current exhibit LEGENDS FROM LOS ANGELES: Betye, Lezley, and Alison Saar in the Crocker Collection. Read about this piece by Alison Saar below.
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In 1991 Alison Saar created a series of bronze relief sculptures for the Harlem-125th Street train station in New York. Together, the figures reference the Underground Railroad and the movement of people in and out of New York throughout history. Saar expanded the project in 2018, creating a series of twenty-four laminated glass panels for shelters lining the platform. Each panel depicts aspects of cultural life during the Harlem Renaissance. When seen together, it offers a panoramic view of dancers, musicians, singers, and revelers.
A year later, Saar published the "Copacetic" portfolio, a suite of eight multi-block linocuts that reference the Harlem-125th Street project and the Harlem Renaissance. Inspired by “the many great African American artists of the Harlem Renaissance that had active printmaking practices, such as Elizabeth Catlett, Hale Woodruff, and Aaron Douglas,” Saar’s prints reinforce Harlem’s vibrant history and enduring legacy.
Hooch, as the title states, references bootleg liquor. Haint suggests a ghost or evil spirit. The term haint stems from the Gullah people, enslaved individuals from Western and Central Africa and their descendants, living in the Lowcountry region of South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida. In Alison Saar’s print, cigarette smoke wafts through the air to form a mandorla made of hair around the ghost. Hair, a marker of racial identity, is a subject often explored by Saar in her work. The ghost and background, a vibrant blue, also point to indigo, a cash crop tied to plantations in the American South which used enslaved African people to cultivate it.
Alison Saar (American, born 1956), “Hooch n' Haint from the Copacetic portfolio,” 2019. Linocut on handmade Japanese Hamada kozo paper, 19 1/2 x 18 in. ... See more