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LaToya Ruby Frazier

Monuments of Solidarity


  • MOMA N.Y.
  • by Roxana Marcoci, Emilie Boone, Carson Chan, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Oluremi C. Onabanjo, Delphine Sims
Published in conjunction with the first comprehensive museum survey dedicated to the artist, LaToya Ruby Frazier: Monuments of Solidarity presents the full range of her practice and includes both rarely seen and brand-new bodies of work. An illuminating overview essay by the exhibition's curator, Roxana Marcoci, is accompanied by a manifesto by the artist and a suite of focused essays by other curators and scholars.

ISBN 9781633451599 | EN | HB
€87,50
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Publisher MOMA N.Y.
ISBN 9781633451599
Author(s) Roxana Marcoci, Emilie Boone, Carson Chan, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Oluremi C. Onabanjo, Delphine Sims
Publication date May 2024
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 305 x 240 mm
Illustrations 300 col.ill.
Pages 264
Language(s) English ed.
Description

Published in conjunction with the first comprehensive museum survey dedicated to the artist, LaToya Ruby Frazier: Monuments of Solidarity presents the full range of her practice and includes both rarely seen and brand-new bodies of work. An illuminating overview essay by the exhibition's curator, Roxana Marcoci, is accompanied by a manifesto by the artist and a suite of focused essays by other curators and scholars.

For more than two decades, the artist-activist LaToya Ruby Frazier has used photography, text, moving images, and performance to revive and preserve forgotten narratives of labor, gender, and race in the postindustrial era. Frazier has cultivated a practice that builds on the legacy of the social documentary tradition of the 1930s, the photo-conceptual forays of the 1960s and 1970s, and the work of socially conscious writers like Upton Sinclair, James Baldwin, and bell hooks. Monuments of Solidarity celebrates the creativity and collaboration that persist in the face of industrialization and deindustrialization, racial and environmental injustice, gender disparities, unequal access to health care and clean water, and the erosion or denial of fundamental human rights. A form of Black feminist world-building, Frazier’s nontraditional “monuments” demand recognition of the crucial role that women and people of color have played, and continue to play, in histories of labor and the working class.

LaToya Ruby Frazier

LaToya Ruby Frazier

€87.50