for you

Name/Title

for you

Entry/Object ID

2020.21c

Description

Black ink wash painting forming letters that reads "This Blackness Is Just For You"

Artwork Details

Medium

Ink wash on paper

Context

Chicago-based artist Ayanah Moor’s first text-based paintings started years before our current moment of protest poster aesthetics and neighborhood storefronts announcing their alliances with Black, brown, and LGBTQ+ groups through window displays. For DePaul Art Museum (DPAM), Moor challenges us to question our personal and collective progress, intentions, and methods of change surrounding issues of equity and inclusion. Are our alliances swift and superficial, or deeply rooted and ready for hard-fought change? The artist’s site-specific installation in DePaul Art Museum’s CTA-facing billboards allows audiences to rethink and unlearn our relationships to the issues of race, politics, and progress through the act of wordplay and the power of individual words in her artwork. She invites each of us to read the work through our heavily loaded personal and collective histories, perspectives, and observations and to question the artist’s own motive and relationship to the concepts of Blackness and blackness regarding race and color theory in social and art historical contexts. What is in a name, a label, or a color? How does the power of words change with our inflection of tone as we perform and pronounce them? Exploring her experiences in academia—specifically in relationship to diversity initiatives in university settings—Moor wrestles with the problematics for people of color in accepting invitations to participate in environments and systems not historically built for or in consideration of them. She engages with how these settings and their intentions can both help and harm communities of color. At DPAM, Moor’s text-based works are positioned in a transitional location: both physically on and off a university campus, at and outside of a museum, and for audiences literally in-between places on their commute. Posing her tongue-in-cheek phrases in this specific locale, the artist is asking viewers to consider what the process of change really looks like within our institutional systems and how our physical and historical environments influence our reading, our understanding, and our engagement with certain visual cues.

Acquisition

Accession

2020.21

Source or Donor

Moor, Ayanah

Acquisition Method

Purchase

Credit Line

Courtesy of the artist

Made/Created

Artist

Moor, Ayanah

Date made

2020

Lexicon

Nomenclature 4.0

Nomenclature Primary Object Term

Painting

Nomenclature Class

Art

Nomenclature Category

Category 08: Communication Objects

LOC Thesaurus for Graphic Materials

Racism, Social justice

Dimensions

Height

20 in

Width

15 in

Color

Black

Exhibition

for you