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Radical Virtuosity - Ana Mendieta and the Black Atlantic

Radical Virtuosity - Ana Mendieta and the Black Atlantic

The MIT Press

2019

9780262042703

Hardcover

24 x 16 x 2.2

pages

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Reclaiming the artist Ana Mendieta as a formally innovative maker of performative art who forged connections to the marginalized around the world.
The artist Ana Mendieta (1948–1985) is remembered as the creator of powerful works expressing a vibrant and unflinching second-wave feminist sensibility. In Radical Virtuosity, art historian Genevieve Hyacinthe offers a new view of Mendieta, connecting her innovative artwork to the art, cultural aesthetics and concerns, feminisms, and sociopolitical messages of the black Atlantic. Mendieta left Cuba as a preteen, fleeing the Castro regime, and spent years in U.S. foster care. Her sense of exile, Hyacinthe argues, colors her work. Hyacinthe examines the development of Mendieta's performative artworks—particularly the Silueta series (1973–1985), which documented the silhouette of her body in the earth over time (a series “without end,” Mendieta said)—and argues that these works were shaped by Mendieta's appropriation and reimagining of Afro-Cuban ritual. Mendieta's effort to create works that invited audience participation, Hyacinthe says, signals her interest in forging connections with the marginalized, particularly those of the black Atlantic and Global South. Hyacinthe describes the “counter entropy” of Mendieta's small-scale earthworks (contrasting them with more massive works created by Robert Smithson and other male artists); considers the resonance of Mendieta's work with the contemporary practices of black Atlantic female artists including Wangechi Mutu, Renee Green, and Damali Abrams; and connects Mendieta's artistic and political expressions to black Atlantic feminisms of such popular artists as Princess Nokia. Mendieta's life and work are often overshadowed in popular perception by her early and tragic death—at thirty-six, she plunged from the window of the thirty-fourth floor Greenwich Village apartment she shared with her husband, the artist Carl Andre. (Andre was charged with her murder and acquitted.) Hyacinthe's account—profusely illustrated, with many images in color—reclaims Mendieta's work and legacy for its artistic significance.
Genevieve Hyacinthe is Assistant Professor of Visual Studies at California College of the Arts in San Francisco.

“This is one of those rare books that will surprise the reader. With its expert weaving of Afro-Caribbean cultural traditions into the history of contemporary art, Genevieve Hyacinthe's exhaustively researched study is without parallel in Mendieta's bibliography.”

Antonio Sergio Bessa, author of Öyvind Fahlström: The Art of Reading

A tour de force of stunning beauty and courageous intelligence, this is a feast of textual, visual, and embodied yearnings across and beyond categories of black Atlantic rituals and postmodern thought. Voices across space and time join in conversation with Ana Mendieta and her radical re-imaging of art and justice.”

D. Soyini Madison, Professor of Performance Studies, Northwestern University; author of Acts of Activism: Human Rights as Radical Performance

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