Shifting Landscapes 

2024

Rustic metal sculpture with chains and pots in the foreground, colorful patchwork quilt on the wall, abstract art piece in the background.

Rujeko Hockley: Joe Minter is an artist based in Birmingham, Alabama, where for the last thirty-plus years he’s been working on his life’s work, an installation on his own property called African VillageAfrican Village is assembled of various found materials including, primarily metal, but also street signs, dolls, all sorts of bric-a-brac that he’s found around his neighborhood, all of which is kind of building, in his mind, a large history of the African American experience, particularly in the American South.

Narrator: Rujeko Hockley was one of the co-curators of the 2019 Whitney Biennial.

Rujeko Hockley: The pieces on view in the Biennial are not a part of African Village, they were made separately from that work. However, like African Village they carry his interest in materials, in metal specifically, in creating forms through found objects as well as alluding specifically to incidents in American history relating to African Americans. In the work 63 Foot Soldiers, he’s thinking specifically about the Civil Rights Movement. The other three works that you see are not quite as directly related to events but also carry some of those connotations.


Installation view of Shifting Landscapes (Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, November 1, 2024–January 2026). From back to front: Martha Jane Pettway, Sweep, 1980; Lonnie Holley, Untitled, 1995; Joe Minter, The First Fireplace, 1998. Photograph by Audrey Wang

0:00

0:00


On the Hour

A 30-second online art project:
Frank WANG Yefeng, The Levitating Perils #2

Learn more about this project

Learn more at whitney.org/artport

On the Hour projects can contain motion and sound. To respect your accessibility settings autoplay is disabled.