Kerry James Marshall @ San Francisco Art Institute

09/26/2007 - 19:30
09/26/2007 - 21:30
Etc/GMT-7

Wednesday, 26 September at 7:30pm
Lecture Hall
800 Chestnut Street campus
Free and open to the public

Through a variety of media, Kerry James Marshall addresses the social and political implications of African American popular culture. Born in Birmingham, Alabama, and raised in South Central Los Angeles, Marshall utilizes imagery associated with these historic sites of activism—in particular, from the Civil Rights movement and the Watts Riots. He depicts middle-class living rooms, suburban backyards, ordinary folk, and political icons. His ongoing comic strip, Rythm Mastr, follows the adventures of an inner-city African American superhero. Marshall’s work has been exhibited at the 2003 Venice Biennale; the 1999–2000 Carnegie International; the 1997 Whitney Biennial; and Documenta X and XII in Kassel. In 1998, Marshall’s work was the subject of a major exhibition, which traveled to such venues as the Brooklyn Museum of Art; SFMoMA; and the Institute for Contemporary Art in Boston. He received a MacArthur Fellowship in 1997. He teaches at the School of Art and Design at the University of Illinois-Chicago.

This lecture has been generously funded by the Winifred Johnson Clive Foundation.