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Talk | Roundtable on Faith Ringgold

January 30, 20246:00 pm - 7:30 pm

English/Spanish CART and ASL provided

Advance tickets for this event have been claimed. Walk-up tickets are available on the night of the event on a first come, first served basis.

About the Event

Join us for a conversation on how Faith Ringgold’s aesthetic and political practices continue to reverberate across generations of artists with artists Jamal Cyrus and Amanda Williams, and the MCA presentation Curator of Faith Ringgold: American People, MCA Manilow Senior Curator Jamillah James.

English/Spanish CART and ASL are provided.

 

Captioning provided.ASL provided.

About the Speakers

Headshot of Jamal Cyrus, a Black person with a black and white beard, wearing a light blue buttoned up shirt.

Jamal Cyrus. Image credit: Leslie Hewitt.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Headshot of Amanda Williams, a Black person with short black hair wearing earrings and a bright blue cowl neck sweater.

Amanda Williams, Artist and Architect, 2022 MacArthur Fellow, Chicago, IL. Image credit: John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.

Jamal Cyrus’ (born 1973, Houston, TX) expansive practice draws on the languages of collage and assemblage, and explores the evolution of African American identity within Black political movements and the African diaspora. He is engaged with an aesthetic practice that aims to transform the most mundane materials into objects with rich, densely packed networks of meaning and purpose.

Cyrus received his BFA from the University of Houston in 2004 and his MFA from the University of Pennsylvania in 2008. He has won several prestigious awards, including most recently a Guggenheim Fellowship (2023). Cyrus was awarded the Driskell Prize, (High Museum of Art, Atlanta, GA) in 2020. The artist’s mid-career survey, The End of My Beginning, opened at the Blaffer Museum of Art in 2021 before continuing on to the Institute of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles and the Mississippi Museum of Art. Cyrus was also a member of the artist collective Otabenga Jones and Associates, active from 2002 to 2017.

 

Amanda Williams is a visual artist who trained as an architect. Her creative practice employs color as an operative means for drawing attention to the complex ways race informs how we assign value to the spaces we occupy. Williams’s installations, sculptures, paintings, and works on paper seek to inspire new ways of looking at the familiar and, in the process, raise questions about the inequitable state of urban space and ownership in America. Her breakthrough series Color(ed) Theory, a set of condemned South Side of Chicago houses, painted in a monochrome palette derived from racially and culturally codified color associations, has been named by the New York Times one of the 25 most significant works of postwar architecture in the world. Her ongoing painting series, What Black Is This You Say? is an exhaustive visual tome on the elusive nature of ‘black’ as a color and racialized identity.

Amanda has exhibited at the Venice Architecture Biennale, the Museum of Contemporary Art Chicago, the Museum of Modern Art, New York, and the Hammer Museum to name a few. She serves as a board member for the Terra Foundation, the Graham Foundation, the Pulitzer Arts Foundation, the Garfield Park Conservatory and the Hyde Park Art Center. She is also co-founder of the Black Reconstruction Collective. Her work is in several permanent collections including the MoMA, the MCA, the Art Institute of Chicago and the Smithsonian. Amanda is a MacArthur Foundation Fellow and recently named a Chicagoan of the Year by Chicago Magazine. She lives and works in Chicago.

Funding

Talk

Lead support for the 2022-23 season of MCA Talks is made possible by The Richard and Mary L. Gray Lecture Series through a generous gift to the Chicago Contemporary Campaign.

Generous support is provided by The Antje B. and John J. Jelinek Endowed Lecture and Symposium on Contemporary Art; the Kristina Barr Lectures, which were established through a generous gift by The Barr Fund to the Chicago Contemporary Campaign; The Gloria Brackstone Solow and Eugene A. Solow, MD, Memorial Lecture Series; and the Allen M. Turner Tribute Fund, honoring his past leadership as Chair of the Board of Trustees.

Exhibition

Lead support of Faith Ringgold: American People is provided by the Harris Family Foundation in memory of Bette and Neison Harris, Zell Family Foundation, Cari and Michael Sacks, and R.H. Defares.

Major support is provided by Ellen-Blair Chube, DIOR, Susie L. Karkomi and Marvin Leavitt, Liz and Eric Lefkofsky, Northern Trust, Carol Prins and John Hart/The Jessica Fund, Robin Loewenberg Tebbe and Mark Tebbe, and Charlotte Cramer Wagner and Herbert S. Wagner III of the Wagner Foundation.

Generous support is provided by Cheryl and Eric McKissack and Karyn and Bill Silverstein.

This exhibition is supported by the Women Artists Initiative, a philanthropic commitment to further equity across gender lines and promote the work and ideas of women artists.

Dior logoNorthern Trust logoWagner Foundation Logo

Lead support for this exhibition at the New Museum, New York has been provided by The Henry Luce Foundation. Major support for this exhibition has been provided by The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts, with generous support from the National Endowment for the Arts, Oprah Winfrey Charitable Foundation, Glenstone, and the Robert Lehman Foundation.