Give Me Some Moments
Lorna Simpson, Lyra night sky styled in NYC, 2020, Collage on paper 45.6 x 34.8 cm / 17 15/16 x 13 11/16 in
These themes are a guiding force in Simpson’s new virtual exhibition with Hauser and Wirth titled Give Me Some Moments, which opened on the 2nd of May—following her critically-acclaimed exhibition Darkening with the gallery last year. In this collection of collages, her subjects—predominantly African American women from vintage issues of Ebony and Jet magazines—are spliced with architectural elements, environmental imagery and animals, imparting black and white magazine portraiture with new, vivid narratives. These portraits are deconstructed, reconstructed and transformed to tell stories that are central to contemporary African American culture. The stories of silenced women come to life.
“The notion of fragmentation, especially of the body, is prevalent in our culture, and it’s reflected in my works," says Simpson. "We’re fragmented not only in terms of how society regulates our bodies, but in the way we think about ourselves."
This fragmentation is brought to the fore in Give Me Some Moments, as extreme cropping and close-ups exemplify a surrealism through layers of abstraction and figuration. Parts of the body are both focused on and removed. In ‘Flames’, black hair becomes a powerful scene; a fire-ravaged home. The cultural significance and nuanced symbolism of African American hair has appeared in Simpson’s previous works—often as representations of meditative beauty—but here becomes something much more visceral.
She has also created three works for the exhibition while under quarantine titled ‘Solar Glare,' ‘Walk with Me’ and ‘Lyra Night Sky Styled in NYC,' the latter again depicting a transformation of black hair. This time, it becomes a blueprint of the constellations of the night sky, and fittingly, Corona Borealis is the most apparent. Perhaps a message of unity, as we stare up at the same sky at a time of isolation.
There is a provocative ambiguity to Simpson’s works, pointing the viewer to a narrative, while also allowing them to impart their own experiences. As the spirits of her subjects are cast across each arresting work, we are asked to probe our perceptions, questioning our notions of race and identity through our own imaginations.
Give Me Some Moments is part of Hauser and Wirth’s innovative virtual exhibition calendar. 10% of gross profits from the sales of all works in their online exhibitions will be donated to the COVID-19 Solidarity Response Fund for the World Health Organisation.
See the exhibition now on the Hauser and Wirth website.