Fraenkel Gallery: Carrie Mae Weems

Fraenkel Gallery
FRÆNKEL Exhibitions

Carrie Mae Weems

Jan 9–Feb 22, 2025

New work and highlights from key series

A color photograph depicts the corner of a commercial building. The windows surrounding two doorways have been covered with plywood, and much of the wood is painted brown. The photograph is floated and framed in black
Painting the Town #1, 2021pigment print, 61-1/8 x 90 inches (framed) [155.3 x 228.6 cm], edition of 5Inquire

Gallery

Jan 9–Feb 22, 2025

Press release

More About:
Carrie Mae Weems

Fraenkel Gallery is pleased to present an exhibition by Carrie Mae Weems featuring new work as well as highlights from several key series in the artist’s four-decade career. The exhibition continues Weems’s long exploration of questions about power, history, and identity. Two new photographs from Weems’s ongoing Museum Series depicting San Francisco’s Legion of Honor will be on view for the first time, shown with other selections from the project. Large-scale photographs from Painting the Town present boarded-up storefronts in Portland, Oregon following protests against the murder of George Floyd. Other works reference earlier moments in the struggle for racial justice, including scenes from Civil Rights protests in the 1960s. Weems will speak at FOG Design+Art on Saturday, January 25, at 5pm, followed by a conversation with San Francisco Museum of Modern Art Director Christopher Bedford.

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Black and white photograph of a figure in a black dress facing the exterior of a museum
The Legion of Honor, 2006-presentpigment print, 72 x 60 inches (sheet & mount) [182.9 x 152.4 cm], edition of 5 + 2APsInquire

For nearly 20 years, Weems’s Museum Series has pictured the artist standing before influential art institutions around the world. Dressed in black with her back to the camera, in these black and white photographs Weems stands as a witness, inviting questions about how power is inscribed in the architecture of the buildings and embodied by the institutions. Debuting in this exhibition are two new images, created in the fall of 2024, where Weems photographed herself in the iconic courtyard of the Legion of Honor. In one photograph, she confronts its monumental Rodin sculpture The Thinker. In the other, Weems walks through a marble portico, framed by columns and shadows. Other works depict the Guggenheim Bilbao, the Louvre, and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston.

Color photograph of a defaced and boarded up business exterior with orange and pink swatches of color on yellow framed in a black frame
Painting the Town #4, 2021pigment print, 58-7/8 x 86-7/8 inches (framed) [149.9 x 221 cm], edition of 5 + 2APsInquire

Themes of silence, erasure, and exclusion recur throughout several of the series on view, highlighting the power struggles of race relations in America. The large-scale color photographs in Painting the Town record swathes of paint used by local authorities to cover up anti-racist graffiti in Portland, Oregon, the city where Weems was born. The drab expanses of paint serve to mute the voices of protesters, while the resulting images resemble paintings by Abstract Expressionists, recalling the erasure of Black artists from the history of modernist art movements. Weems’s series Listening Devices also explores questions about voicelessness. In it, twelve photogravure prints depict old-fashioned tools for conveying sound, from tin cans connected with a string to vintage telephones. Shown as isolated instruments, the objects suggest a failure of communication, demanding the human participation that real listening requires. 

Six color photographs tinted in hues of pinks and blues depicting figures being brutalized by police in the street framed in black
Blues and Pinks 3, 2020six archival inkjet prints, 53-3/4 x 55 inches (overall installed) [141.6 x 139.7 cm], edition of 3Inquire

Other works depict protest and the struggle for racial justice. In the two-channel video Cornered, historical footage from Boston in 1965 shows angry marchers for and against desegregation. Accompanied only by the sound of Samuel Barber’s mournful Adagio for Strings, men in each group gesture and move towards each other but never meet, in an eternal confrontation spatialized by the walls of the gallery. In Blues and Pinks, Weems repurposes archival photographs by Charles Moore from the 1963 Children’s Crusade in Birmingham, Alabama, and images from the funerals of Medgar Evers and Martin Luther King Jr. In the multipanel works, hung askew on the wall, images are tinted blue and pink in a tender reference to the children they depict. All the Boys (Profile 2) presents a blurred, dark blue image of a young Black man in a hoodie, shown from the front and the side. Ghostlike, the diptych suggests a mugshot and transforms the subject from an individual into the hazy outline of a person, referencing the history of police brutality against Black people.

Two color photographs in hues of blue depicting an out of focus figure wearing a hoodie
All the Boys (Profile 2), 2016two pigment prints, 61-1/2 x 47-1/2 inches (each framed) [154.9 x 120.6 cm], edition of 5Inquire

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In the Shop

Carrie Mae Weems: Reflections for Now

$40.00

Carrie Mae Weems: Kitchen Table Series

$60.00

Carrie Mae Weems: The Shape of Things

$60.00

Poster of a black and white photograph of an African American couple at a kitchen table, a man seated and reading the paper, a woman standing behind with her hands on his shoulders.

Carrie Mae Weems: Witness (poster)

Out of print

About the Artist

Carrie Mae Weems’s recent solo exhibitions include Remember to Dream at the Hessel Museum of Art, Bard College, Annandale-On-Hudson, New York; Looking Forward, Looking Back at the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.; Reflections for Now, at the Barbican Centre, London; and The Shape of Things, at the Park Avenue Armory in New York and LUMA, Arles, France. The Evidence of Things Not Seen was organized by Württembergischer Kunstverein Stuttgart, in Germany and a version of the exhibition traveled to Kunstmuseum Basel in Switzerland. Weems was featured in the two-person exhibition Dawoud Bey & Carrie Mae Weems: In Dialogue, which premiered at the Grand Rapids Art Museum, Michigan and traveled to the Tampa Museum of Art, Florida; Seattle Art Museum; and The Getty Center, Los Angeles. Fundación MAPFRE in collaboration with Fundación Foto Colectania and WKV organized the survey A great turn in the possible.

Weems has received numerous awards, grants, and fellowships, including most recently a 2024 National Medal of Arts, a Hasselblad Award, a MacArthur “Genius” grant, the Joseph Hazen Rome Prize Fellowship from the American Academy in Rome, NEA grants, the Louis Comfort Tiffany Award, and the Congressional Black Caucus Foundation’s Lifetime Achievement Award, among others. Her work is in the collections of the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco; Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York; Museum of Fine Arts, Houston; Museum of Modern Art, New York; Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles; Tate Modern, London, and many others.


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