Henry Taylor: B Side

Oct 4, 2023–Jan 28, 2024


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Taylor created this installation in homage to the Black Panther Party and, in particular, to his brother Randy, who was active in the Party’s branch in Ventura, California. The Black Panthers advocated for self-defense and community empowerment, and established social programs—including free food, clothing distribution, and health clinics—to uplift marginalized communities. By including photographs of individuals recently killed by the police alongside mannequins clothed in both the black berets and leather jackets the Panthers typically wore and more contemporary attire, such as Colin Kaepernick’s San Francisco 49ers jersey, Taylor connects protests against racial injustice from the past and present.

Henry Taylor, Homage to a Brother, 2007

The shape of a person wearing a t-shirt with the words "SEAN" in gold letters above.
The shape of a person wearing a t-shirt with the words "SEAN" in gold letters above.

Henry Taylor, Homage to a Brother, 2007. Acrylic and collage on linen, 85 1/2 × 78 1/2 in. (217.2 × 199.4 cm). The Studio Museum in Harlem; gift of Martin and Rebecca Eisenberg. © Henry Taylor. Courtesy the artist and Hauser & Wirth. Photograph by Fredrik Nilsen

Homage to a Brother memorializes Sean Bell, a twenty-three-year-old Black man who was killed by plainclothes NYPD officers in Queens, New York, on the eve of his wedding in November 2006. Upon reading of Bell’s death, Taylor was struck by how familiar he seemed, like a son or nephew. During a 2007 residency at the Studio Museum in Harlem, he visited Bell’s neighborhood, where he gathered tokens of communal love and grief for the deceased—including a gold chain and cardboard letters spelling his name—which he then incorporated into this painting. Taylor’s handwritten text includes the words “Sean, I ain’t lying, I’m thinking about you. . . . Really I want to say I didn’t know you but I love you.”


On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Maya Man, A Realistic Day In My Life Living In New York City

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

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