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View: In situ
Memory: Future
Howardena Pindell (American, born in 1943)
1980-1981
Medium/Technique
Acrylic, dye, paper, thread, tempera, photographic transfers, glitter, and powder on stitched canvas strips backed with mylar
Dimensions
Overall: 210.8 x 295.9 cm (83 x 116 1/2 in.)
Credit Line
Museum purchase with funds donated by Barbara L. and Theodore B. Alfond through the Acorn Foundation in honor of Ann and Graham Gund Director, Matthew D. Teitelbaum
Accession Number2015.2836
NOT ON VIEW
CollectionsContemporary Art, Americas
ClassificationsMixed media
Howardena Pindell drew on many sources for the form of this work, including African textiles' unstretched format and their open designs, which she notes can "expand and contract, inhale and exhale." However, the content came from a car accident that caused her to experience periodic memory loss. Writing recollections on postcards, Pindell used these memories as source material for her abstract, flickering artworks. One childhood memory is telling. Stopping for root beer on a drive through Kentucky in the 1950s, she asked her father why there were red circles under their mugs: "He said, 'That's because we're black and we cannot use the same utensils as the whites.' I realized that's really the origin of my being driven to try to change the circle in my mind, trying to take the sting out of that."
Provenance2015, consigned by the artist to Garth Greenan Gallery, New York, NY; 2015, sold by the Garth Greenan Gallery to the MFA. (Accession Date: September 24, 2015)
CopyrightCourtesy the artist and Garth Greenan Gallery, New York