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Rikkí Wright’s Map of Black Beauty

Beauty is both temporal and contextual. It all starts when adolescents become aware of their bodies through exposure to social conventions in the developmental stage. Growing up in her father’s beauty salon meant that Wright had a head start to understand these conventions. She witnessed moments of laughter and tears in the salon, a space marked by the vulnerability and unmistakable strength of the women who inhabited it. Even in the absence of her birth mother, Wright was afforded a holistic view of the Black woman’s experience at a young age which continues to mold her idea of beauty.

On the subject of her recent work, Wright says, "It serves as some sort of map for me. The mapping out of very important/distinct markers of Black beauty and the relevance it held and still holds in my life.” The phrase “mapping out” nicely captures her artistic methodology, featuring the transferral of archival images onto ceramic forms. It is through this personal approach—digging up family photographs and images from books in her father’s beauty salon—that Wright masterfully produces relics of the past to inform her present. Ultimately, these photographic collages shift the beauty narrative by embracing the fragments of who we are and where we come from. As a result, the Black woman’s story is transformed into one of power and ownership, the Black femme presence proving that beauty is, in fact, possible.

Wright’s exhibition is on display at the Carlye Packer Gallery in Los Angeles until March 12, 2023. Her recent exhibitions include “Superimposition” at Phillips Auction House in West Hollywood, “Shattered Glass” at Jeffrey Deitch in Los Angeles and Miami, “Goddess” at Jeffrey Deitch for Art Basel in Miami, “Unshuttering LA” at the Getty Photography Pavillion in Los Angeles, and a solo presentation at Art Joburg in South Africa. Outside of her canon, Wright’s photography is regularly published in the Los Angeles Times and the New York Times.

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