Whitney Biennial 2024

2024

Abstract geometric painting with a chaotic arrangement of wooden planks against a backdrop of stylized building facades.

Hallie Ringle: My name is Hallie Ringle. I'm the Chief Curator at the Institute of Contemporary Art at the University of Pennsylvania.

Narrator: Ringle is currently organizing a survey show of Pusey’s work with the ICA Philly and the Studio Museum in Harlem that will open in 2025. She spoke to us over zoom about Pusey’s “Broken Construction” series, which she worked on in New York City for over four decades. They’re inspired in part by a famous photograph of so-called Hoovervilles in Central Park.

Hallie Ringle: And so these were people who were living in Central Park during the Great Depression and there was some type of door or structure that was falling apart, and the wood was nailed back onto the door in these really haphazard ways, so a lot of the times when you see falling pieces intersecting with each other, it's a reference to that photograph.

She often included circles in her pieces as a way of saying that this form is complete. And so no real work of hers was complete without a circle. 

Narrator: Pusey’s interest in geometry may be traced back to her upbringing in Kingston, Jamaica, and her background in fashion. One of her first jobs was at a garment factory, and she went on to work at ateliers in London and study in New York. 

Hallie Ringle: When you look at pattern forms. You see a lot of this like a lot of the same shapes that she's using. And so sometimes you'll look at a painting of hers. And, for example, this big blue circle could be somehow connected to a pant leg, or it almost reminds you of something that you'd be cutting out of fabric if you were sewing or creating pieces. 

And so I think she was a person with a really strong vision, and to live then and to work then as a Black woman geometric abstractionist is really impressive. 


Mavis Pusey, Within Manhattan, 1977. Oil on canvas, 73 × 115 in. (185.4 × 292.1 cm). Collection of Neil Lane. © Estate of Mavis Pusey. Photograph by Elon Schoenholz

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