Cauleen Smith: Mutualities
Feb 17, 2020–Jan 31, 2021
Cauleen Smith (b. 1967) draws on experimental film, non-Western cosmologies, poetry, and science fiction to create works that reflect on memory and Afro-diasporic histories. Mutualities, the artist’s first solo show in New York, presents two of Smith’s films, Sojourner and Pilgrim—each in a newly created installation environment—along with a new group of drawings collectively titled Firespitters.
The films unfold across several important sites in Black spiritual and cultural history, weaving together writings by women from different eras, including Shaker visionary Rebecca Cox Jackson, abolitionist Sojourner Truth, the 1970s Black feminist organization Combahee River Collective, and experimental jazz composer and spiritual leader Alice Coltrane, whose music also forms the soundtrack for both films. Smith’s poetic use of the camera and light draws the viewer into a welcoming and accepting space that reveals the many ways in which invention and generosity can be resources for transformation and regeneration.
Cauleen Smith: Mutualities is organized by Chrissie Iles, Anne & Joel Ehrenkranz Curator, with Clemence White, senior curatorial assistant.
Cauleen Smith: Mutualities is part of the Whitney’s emerging artists program, sponsored by
Generous support is provided by The Rosenkranz Foundation.
Additional support is provided by the Artists Council.
Sojourner
2
In Sojourner, a group of women walk in procession through sites including Dockweiler State Beach and Watts Towers in Los Angeles, carrying translucent orange banners—each emblazoned with part of a text by the jazz composer and spiritual leader Alice Coltrane, whose writings, along with those of Sojourner Truth, are spoken throughout the film.
Watts Towers, a cluster of seventeen sculptural spires designed and built by Italian American ironworker Simon Rodia in the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles between 1921 and 1954, features prominently. The towers served as powerful symbols of hope and regeneration after surviving the 1965 Watts Rebellion unscathed. Smith locates a similar spirit in assemblage artist Noah Purifoy’s Outdoor Desert Art Museum in Joshua Tree, California, where the women end their procession and listen to a reading of the Black feminist Combahee River Collective manifesto.
These collective voices, echoed in contemporary footage of the Chicago-based activist coalition R3 (Resist. Reimagine. Rebuild.), fuse spirituality and activism into a potent articulation of self-realization and resistance.
Explore works from this exhibition
in the Whitney's collection
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In the News
"[A] visual feat" —The Art Newspaper
"Smith merges utopian futurism with wistful revision." —The New Yorker
"In many ways Cauleen Smith is the dynamic, conceptual artist one would expect. Beyond expectations, however, is her bold—and especially collaborative—creative voice." —CR Fashion Book