Glenn Ligon (born 1960, pronounced Lie-gōne) is an American conceptual artist whose work explores race, language, desire, sexuality, and identity.[1] Based in New York City, Ligon's work often draws on 20th century literature and speech of 20th century cultural figures such as James Baldwin, Zora Neale Hurston, Gertrude Stein, Jean Genet, and Richard Pryor. He is noted as one of the originators of the term Post-Blackness.
Glenn Ligon | |
---|---|
Born | 1960 (age 63–64) The Bronx, New York City, U.S. |
Education | Wesleyan University |
Known for | Conceptual art |
Early life and career
editLigon was born in 1960 in the Forest Houses Projects in the south Bronx. When he was seven, his divorced, working-class parents were able to get scholarships for him and his older brother to attend Walden School, a high-quality, progressive, private school on Manhattan's Upper West Side.[2] Ligon enrolled at the Rhode Island School of Design, where he spent two years before transferring to Wesleyan University. He graduated from Wesleyan with a B.A. in 1982.[3] Ligon attended the Whitney Museum Independent Study Program in 1985.
After graduating, he worked as a proofreader for a law firm, while in his spare time he painted, working in the abstract Expressionist style of Willem de Kooning and Jackson Pollock.[2] In 1985, he participated in the Whitney Museum of American Art's Independent Study Program.[4] He continues to live and work in New York City.[5]
While he started his career as an abstract painter, he began to introduce text and words into his work during the mid-1980s in order to better express his political concerns and ideas about racial identity.[6] Most of the text that he used came from prominent African-American writers (James Baldwin, Zora Neale Hurston, and Ralph Ellison).[6]
Ligon gained prominence in the early 1990s, along with a generation of artists including Janine Antoni, Renée Green, Marlon Riggs, Gary Simmons, and Lorna Simpson.[7]
Personal life
editLigon lives in Tribeca.[8] He has served on the board of directors of the Foundation for Contemporary Arts (FCA).[9] He currently serves on the Board of directors for the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation (Archived September 20, 2021, at the Wayback Machine),[10] The Pulitzer Foundation (Archived September 20, 2021, at the Wayback Machine),[11] and LAXART (Archived September 20, 2021, at the Wayback Machine).[12] His Brooklyn studio is near where artist friends Paul Ramirez Jonas and Byron Kim also work.[13]
Work
editLigon works in multiple media, including painting, neon, video, and photography based works. His work is greatly informed by his experiences as a gay African American man[7] living in the United States.
Text-based Works
editAlthough Ligon's work spans sculptures, prints, drawings, mixed media and neon, painting remains a core activity. He has incorporated texts into his paintings, in the form of literary fragments, jokes, and evocative quotes from a selection of authors, which he stencils directly onto the canvas by hand.[14] His source materials concern issues of the lives of black Americans throughout history.
In 1990, he mounted his first solo show, "How It Feels to Be Colored Me," in Brooklyn.[1] This show established Ligon's reputation for creating large, text-based paintings in which a phrase chosen from literature or other sources is repeated continuously. Smudges and streaks from stenciled text layer until the repeated lines become obscured. Untitled (I Am a Man) (1988), a reinterpretation of the signs carried during the Memphis sanitation strike in 1968 — made famous by Ernest Withers's photographs of the march, is the first example of his use of text.[15] In several other paintings, he overlaps repeating text to a point of illegibility, demanding the viewer's attention as they try to make out the obscured words.[16] Ligon's Prologue Series #2 (1991) includes the opening text of Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man, stenciled in various shades of black and grey, the words becoming less discernible as they progress towards the bottom of the composition. He uses this same passage of text in Prologue Series #5 (1991), but obscures the words further, creating a further sense of abstraction and ambiguity about the subject.[17]
In 1993, Ligon began his series of paintings based on Richard Pryor's groundbreaking stand-up comedy routines from the 1970s.
In Ligon's Stranger series, he pursues a career long exploration of paintings based on James Baldwin's 1953 essay Stranger in the Village. This series began in 1996 with selected excepts rendered in Ligon's stenciling technique that gradually reduces the legibility of the text on the canvas. In 2021, Ligon culminates this series by presenting the essay in full in large scale text-based paintings.
Glenn Ligon's Debris Field series began with etchings in 2012. In 2018 he extended this series to paintings. These paintings are also made with stencils but they do not reference pre-existing texts, literature, or speech acts from cultural figures directly. Instead the Debris Field series uses stencils of letterforms that Ligon has created. The letterforms are arranged in all-over compositions on the canvas. Though recognizable as letters, the stenciled shapes also stack and layer on the canvas, furthering Ligon's career long engagement with issues of legibility, and tension between figuration and abstraction.
To Disembark (1993) and Runaways (1993)
editIn 1993, Ligon's To Disembark was presented at the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden in Washington, D.C. The title references to the title of a book of poetry by Gwendolyn Brooks. This show connected the legacy of American slavery to current racial injustices and evoked the recognition that African Americans are still coping with the remnants of slavery and its manifestation in racism.[18] In the titular work of the exhibition Untitled (To Disembark) from 1993, Ligon created a series of packing crates modeled after the one described by ex-slave Henry "Box" Brown in his Narrative of Henry Box Brown who escaped from Slavery Enclosed in a Box 3 Feet Long and 2 Wide. Brown was a slave who escaped slavery by shipping himself from Virginia to freedom in Philadelphia via a box crate.[19] To Disembark the exhibition centers around nine crates that Ligon constructed and dispersed throughout the gallery. Ligon also took note of how Brown was allegedly singing when he arrived in Philadelphia. To incorporate this element, Ligon placed speakers inside the crates quietly playing songs such as "Strange Fruit" sung by Billie Holiday and "Sound of da Police" by KRS-one.[19] Each crate played a different sound, such as a heartbeat, a spiritual, or contemporary rap music. The juxtaposition of all of the songs, spanning a century, is an auditory element which creates a chorus across time, further exposing the lasting effects of slavery. "Strange Fruit" has been used by other black artists such as Hank Willis Thomas in his photography series of the same name.
Also included in this exhibition is Runaways (1993) a suite of 10 lithographs. Ligon asked friends to describe him and then included these descriptions as text in a series of posters depicting himself as a runaway slave in the style of 19th-century broadsheets circulated to advertise for the return of fugitive slaves.[18]
In another part of in the exhibition, Ligon stenciled four quotes from a 1928 Zora Neale Hurston essay, "How It Feels To Be Colored Me", directly on the walls: "I feel most colored when I am thrown against a sharp white background," "I remember the very day that I became colored," "I am not tragically colored," and "I do not always feel colored." Ligon found Hurston's writing illuminating because she explores the idea of race as a concept that is structured by context rather than essence.[18]
Notes on the Margin of the Black Book (1991-1993)
editIn Notes on the Margin of the Black Book (1991-1993), Ligon addresses Robert Mapplethorpe's photographs of black men from his 1996 book titled, Black Book. Ligon cut pages from Black Book and framed 91 photographs, installing them in two horizontal rows. Between them are two more rows of small framed typed texts, 78 comments on sexuality, race, AIDS, art and the controversy over Mapplethorpe's work that was launched by then-Texas Congressman Dick Armey.[20] Ligon explicitly points out the problems of these visuals in Mapplethorpe's book with his row of textual placards between the rows of photographs. These images, because they were first published in Mapplethorpe's book, had a limited the scope under which they were viewed. Ligon, however, made these pictures public in presentation, in a museum: Ligon forced viewers to look at these images in a room full of others.[21] This act allows for open discussion of the images and the politics surrounding them.
Feast of Scraps (1994-98)
editIn A Feast of Scraps (1994–98), he inserted images of black men sourced from pornographic magazines, complete with invented captions ("mother knew," "I fell out" "It's a process") into albums of family snapshots including graduation photographs, vacation snapshots, pictures of baby showers, birthday celebrations, and baptisms. Some of the latter photos include the artist's own family. Photography is used as a way of representing multiple identities through the disruption of images, which expresses the fragmentation of black identity, specifically the artist's own identity. Ligon acknowledges that sexuality is something that is not necessarily visible, so it can be erased in photographs such as photos from his teenage years.[22] The imagery causes the viewer to imagine other aspects of identity and narrative of those depicted in these photographs. This project draws from the secret histories and submerged meanings of inherited texts and images.[1]
Coloring book series
editAnother series of large paintings is based on children's coloring on drawings of iconic figures in 1970s black-history coloring books.[23] This series began when Ligon was an artist in residence at the Walker Art Museum in 1999-2000. There he worked with school children to color on the pages of found coloring books. The resulting works are a series of paintings and drawings made with silkscreen and paint on canvas and paper that are renderings of the children's interventions. Figures such as Malcolm X, Harriet Tubman, and Issac Hayes are depicted in these works.
Neons
editSince 2005, Ligon has made neon works. Warm Broad Glow (2005), Ligon's first exploration in neon, uses a fragment of text from Three Lives, the 1909 novel by American author Gertrude Stein. Ligon rendered the words "negro sunshine" in warm white neon, the letters of which were then painted black on the front.[24] In 2008, the piece was shown in the Renaissance Society's group exhibit, Black Is, Black Ain't.[25] It was installed in the lobby window of the Whitney Museum in 2011.[26] Other neon works are derived from neon sculptures by Bruce Nauman. One Live and Die (2006) stems from Nauman's 100 Live and Die (1984), for example.[24]
Ligon's large-scale installation A Small Band (2015) consists of three neon pieces illuminating the words "blues," "blood," and "bruise." Commissioned for the facade of the Central Pavilion at the fifty-sixth Venice Biennale, the work has been subsequently arranged in a new, site-specific formations at the Stony Island Arts Bank in Chicago, Illinois, the Pulitzer Arts Foundation in St. Louis, Missouri, and the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts in Richmond, Virginia and on the exterior facade of the New Museum in New York, NY as part of the exhibition Grief and Grievance Archived September 24, 2021, at the Wayback Machine. The three words of A Small Band reference composer Steve Reich's 1966 sound piece Come Out, which looped a fragment of the recorded testimony of Daniel Hamm, who was one of the Harlem Six, a group of young black men wrongly accused and convicted of murder in the mid-1960s.
Ligon has created other large-scale installations using neon. Des Parisiens Noirs (2019) is an installation depicting the names of 13 Black models from historic paintings which was presented on an interior facade of the Musée d'Orsay, in Paris. This solo project was presented alongside Black Models: From Géricault to Matisse an exhibition centering the models of African descent whose likenesses are presented in historic paintings and whose biographical details have largely been discovered through archival research.[27] Laure who modeled for Manet's Olympia for example, is one of the thirteen names of black models that Ligon displays in neon. One of the 13 neons included in this work reads "nom inconnu" or name unknown to acknowledge the models whose names have not yet been traced.
In 2021, Ligon was commissioned to create Waiting for the Barbarians for the exhibition Portals organized by the Hellenic Parliament and NEON Archived September 21, 2021, at the Wayback Machine in the atrium of the former Public Tobacco Factory in Athens, Greece. Waiting for the Barbarians (2021), uses the final two lines of C. P. Cavafy's 1904 poem of the same title. In one translation, these final lines read: "Now what's going to happen to us without barbarians? Those people were a kind of solution." His neon installation consists of nine English translations, each different from the other revealing the variations in the translation's meanings and the othering role that the Barbarians were forced into. With Cavafy's verses, Ligon is addressing cultural supremacy and its dependency on othering relation, but the tense of the lines also suggest a time when othering as a solution has past.
The Death of Tom (2008)
editIn 2008, Ligon completed a short film entitled The Death of Tom. It is based on Thomas Edison's 1903 silent film Uncle Tom's Cabin. Playing the character of Tom, Ligon had himself filmed re-creating the last scene of Edison's movie, from which he took his title. But the film was incorrectly loaded in the hand-crank camera that the artist used, so no imagery appeared on film. Embracing this apparent failure, Ligon decided to show his film as an abstract progression of light and shadow with a narrative suggested by the score composed and played by jazz musician Jason Moran.[2]
Exhibitions
editIn 2011 the Whitney Museum of American Art held a mid-career retrospective of Ligon's work, Glenn Ligon: America, organized by Scott Rothkopf, that traveled to the Los Angeles County Museum of Art and the Modern Art Museum of Fort Worth.[28] Important recent shows include: Grief and Grievance Archived September 24, 2021, at the Wayback Machine (2021), at the New Museum, where Ligon acted as a curatorial advisor; Des Parisiens Noirs at the Musées d'Orsay, Paris (2019); Blue Black (2017), an exhibition Ligon curated at the Pulitzer Arts Foundation in St. Louis, inspired by the site-specific Ellsworth Kelly wall sculpture; and Glenn Ligon: Encounters and Collisions (2015), a curatorial project organized with Nottingham Contemporary and Tate Liverpool. Ligon has also been the subject of solo museum exhibitions at the Camden Arts Centre in London, the Power Plant Archived September 22, 2021, at the Wayback Machine in Toronto, the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis, and the Studio Museum in Harlem, among others. His work has been included in major international exhibitions, including the Venice Biennale (2015 and 1997), Berlin Biennal (2014), Istanbul Biennal (2011, 2019), Documenta XI (2002), and Gwangju Biennale (2000).
Notable works in public collections
edit- Untitled (I Am a Man) (1988), National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.[29][30]
- Backlash, Backlash... (1991), Art Institute of Chicago[31]
- I Feel Most Colored (1992), Blanton Museum of Art, Austin, Texas[32]
- Untitled (1992), Baltimore Museum of Art[33]
- Untitled series (1992), Minneapolis Institute of Art[34]
- Untitled (Black Like Me #2) (1992), Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.[35]
- Untitled (I'm Turning Into a Specter before Your Very Eyes and I'm Going to Haunt You) (1992), Philadelphia Museum of Art[36]
- Notes on the Margin of the Black Book (1991–93), Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New York[37]
- Black & White (1993), by Glenn Ligon and Byron Kim, Smithsonian American Art Museum, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.[38]
- Runaways series (1993), Addison Gallery of American Art, Andover, Massachusetts;[39] Amon Carter Museum of American Art, Fort Worth, Texas;[40] Birmingham Museum of Art, Alabama;[41] The Broad, Los Angeles;[42] Harvard Art Museums, Cambridge, Massachusetts;[43] Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York;[44] Mildred Lane Kemper Art Museum, St. Louis;[45] Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago;[46] Museum of Modern Art, New York;[47] National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.;[48] Rhode Island School of Design Museum, Providence;[49] St. Louis Art Museum;[50] Tang Teaching Museum and Art Gallery, Saratoga Springs, New York;[51] and Whitney Museum, New York[52]
- White #15 (1994), Wadsworth Atheneum, Hartford, Connecticut[53]
- Condition Report (2000), Tate, London[54]
- Malcolm X, Sun, Frederick Douglass, Boy with Bubbles (version 2) #1 (2000), Walker Art Center, Minneapolis[55]
- Self-Portrait at Eleven Years Old (2004), Museum of Modern Art, New York[56]
- Untitled (If I Can't Have Love I'll Take Sunshine) (2006), Warwick Arts Centre, Coventry[57]
- Rückenfigur (2009), Los Angeles County Museum of Art[58] and Whitney Museum, New York[59]
- Warm Broad Glow II (2011), Glenstone, Potomac, Maryland[60] and Whitney Museum, New York[61]
- Double America (2012), National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.[62]
- Stranger #56 (2012), Musée National d'Art Moderne, Centre Pompidou, Paris[63]
- Live (2014), Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art, Bentonville, Arkansas, and National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C. (jointly owned);[64][65] and San Francisco Museum of Modern Art[66]
In 2012, Ligon was commissioned to create the first site-specific artwork for the New School's University Center building, designed by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, on the corner of 14th Street and Fifth Avenue in Greenwich Village. The work, For Comrades and Lovers (2015), features about 400 feet of text from Walt Whitman's Leaves of Grass rendered in violet neon light, running around the top of a wall in the center's first-floor café.[26]
Recognition
editIn 2003, Ligon was awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship. In 2005, he won an Alphonse Fletcher Foundation Fellowship for his art work. In 2006 he was awarded the Skowhegan Medal for Painting. In 2009, he received the Studio Museum's Joyce Alexander Wein Artist Prize. In 2010, he won a United States Artists Fellow award.[67]
In 2009, President Barack Obama added Ligon's 1992 Black Like Me No. 2, on loan from the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, to the White House collection, where it was installed in the President's private living quarters.[7] The text in the selected painting is from John Howard Griffin's 1961 memoir Black Like Me, the account of a white man's experiences traveling through the South after he had his skin artificially darkened. The words "All traces of the Griffin I had been were wiped from existence" are repeated in capital letters that progressively overlap until they coalesce as a field of black paint.[2] At the annual Gala in the Garden at the Hammer Museum in 2018, he was honored by attorney and social justice advocate Bryan Stevenson.[68]
In 2018, Ligon was awarded an Honorary Doctorate from The New School.[69]
In 2021, Ligon was elected as a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters.
Art market
editLigon is represented by Hauser & Wirth in New York, Regen Projects in Los Angeles, Thomas Dane Gallery Archived September 16, 2021, at the Wayback Machine in London, and Chantal Crousel Archived September 17, 2021, at the Wayback Machine in Paris.
See also
edit- African-American art
- African-American literature
- Conceptual art
- Glenn Ligon at the Minneapolis Institute of Art Archived June 21, 2023, at the Wayback Machine, Minneapolis, MN
References
edit- ^ a b c Meyer, Richard. "Glenn Ligon", in George E. Haggerty and Bonnie Zimmerman (eds), Gay Histories and Cultures: An Encyclopedia, Volume 2. New York: Garland Publishing, 2000.
- ^ a b c d Hunter Drohojowska-Philp (December 11, 2009), "Glenn Ligon gets Obama's vote", Los Angeles Times.
- ^ Greenberger, Alex (January 15, 2016). "The Writing on the Wall: Glenn Ligon on Borrowing Text to Expose American Racism, in 2011". ARTnews. Archived from the original on November 22, 2021. Retrieved November 22, 2021.
- ^ Glenn Ligon Archived October 28, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Luhring Augustine Gallery, New York.
- ^ Glenn Ligon Archived December 8, 2007, at the Wayback Machine, Broad Art Foundation, Santa Monica.
- ^ a b Corpus, Rolando; Tomlinson, Glenn (1995). "Glenn Ligon". Philadelphia Museum of Art Bulletin. 90: 38–39. doi:10.2307/3795505. JSTOR 3795505.
- ^ a b c Carol Vogel (February 24, 2011), "The Inside Story on Outsiderness" Archived November 30, 2016, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times.
- ^ Hilarie M. Sheets (January 26, 2017), "For Glenn Ligon, Home Is Where History and Friends Are Inspirations" Archived January 29, 2017, at the Wayback Machine The New York Times.
- ^ Foundation for Contemporary Arts Announces 2012 Grants to Artists Archived June 21, 2023, at the Wayback Machine Foundation for Contemporary Arts (FCA), press release of January 2012.
- ^ "Board of Directors | Robert Rauschenberg Foundation". www.rauschenbergfoundation.org. Archived from the original on September 20, 2021. Retrieved September 20, 2021.
- ^ "Board". Pulitzer Arts Foundation. Archived from the original on September 20, 2021. Retrieved September 20, 2021.
- ^ "About". LAXART. Archived from the original on September 20, 2021. Retrieved September 20, 2021.
- ^ Berwick, Carly (April 23, 2011). "Stranger in America". ARTnews.com. Archived from the original on May 21, 2022. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ Glenn Ligon, Stranger #44 (2011) Archived December 28, 2011, at the Wayback Machine, Artists for Haiti, September 22, 2011, Christie's New York.
- ^ Carol Vogel (November 15, 2012), "National Gallery of Art Acquires Glenn Ligon Painting" Archived September 21, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, November 16, 2012.
- ^ Kraynak, Janet (March 2018). "How to Hear What Is Not Heard: Glenn Ligon, Steve Reich, and the Audible Past". Grey Room. 70: 54–79. doi:10.1162/GREY_a_00234. ISSN 1526-3819. S2CID 57569761.
- ^ Conrad, Murray, Derek (December 18, 2015). Queering post-black art : artists transforming African-American identity after civil rights. London. ISBN 9781784532871. OCLC 930016820.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ a b c Kimberly Connor. Imagining Grace: Liberating Theologies in the Slave Narrative Tradition. University of Illinois Press, 2000.
- ^ a b Copeland, Huey (February 2011). "Glenn Ligon and Other Runaway Subjects". Representations. 113 (1): 73–110. doi:10.1525/rep.2011.113.1.73.
- ^ Christopher Knight (October 24, 2011), Art review: 'Glenn Ligon: America' at LACMA Archived May 11, 2013, at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Times.
- ^ Firstenberg, Lauri (2001). "Neo-Archival and Textual Modes of Production: An Interview with Glenn Ligon". Art Journal. 60 (1): 42–47. doi:10.2307/778044. JSTOR 778044.
- ^ DeLand, Lauren (2012). "Black Skin, Black Masks: The Citational Self in the Work of Glenn Ligon". Criticism. 54 (4): 507–537. doi:10.1353/crt.2012.0035. ISSN 1536-0342. S2CID 192133886.
- ^ Saltz, Jerry, "Art: Sign of Life," New York, March 14–21, 2011 page 148
- ^ a b Glenn Ligon: Neon, October 26 - December 8, 2012 Archived September 26, 2012, at the Wayback Machine Luhring Augustine Gallery, New York.
- ^ The Renaissance Society Archived July 20, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Carol Vogel (October 26, 2012), "New School's New Neon" Archived February 15, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times.
- ^ Peck, Aaron. "Reframing the Black Model at the Musée d'Orsay". The New York Review of Books. Archived from the original on September 21, 2021. Retrieved September 21, 2021.
- ^ "Whitney Museum of American Art". Archived from the original on March 2, 2011. Retrieved March 6, 2011.
- ^ Carol Vogel (November 15, 2012), "National Gallery of Art Acquires Glenn Ligon Painting" Archived September 21, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times.
- ^ "Untitled (I Am a Man)". NGA. National Gallery of Art. 1988. Archived from the original on June 16, 2022. Retrieved June 14, 2022.
- ^ "Backlash, Backlash..." ArtIC. Art Institute of Chicago. 1991. Archived from the original on May 13, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "I Feel Most Colored". Blanton Museum of Art. Archived from the original on April 29, 2022. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Untitled". BMA. Baltimore Museum of Art. Archived from the original on April 29, 2022. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Untitled (A)". Mia. Minneapolis Institute of Art. Archived from the original on February 26, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Untitled (Black Like Me #2)". Hirshhorn. Smithsonian Institution. Archived from the original on December 25, 2022. Retrieved December 25, 2022.
- ^ "Untitled (I'm Turning Into a Specter before Your Very Eyes and I'm Going to Haunt You)". Philamuseum. Philadelphia Museum of Art. Archived from the original on March 24, 2022. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Notes on the Margin of the Black Book". Guggenheim. Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum. Archived from the original on May 2, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Black & White". SAAM. Smithsonian Institution. Archived from the original on May 28, 2022. Retrieved June 13, 2022.
- ^ "Runaways". Addison Gallery. Phillips Academy. Archived from the original on August 17, 2022. Retrieved August 17, 2022.
- ^ "Runaways". Carter Museum. Amon Carter Museum of American Art. Archived from the original on October 19, 2021. Retrieved August 17, 2022.
- ^ "Runaways". ArtsBMA. Birmingham Museum of Art. Archived from the original on June 23, 2021. Retrieved August 17, 2022.
- ^ "Runaways". The Broad. Archived from the original on April 11, 2021. Retrieved August 17, 2022.
- ^ "Runaways". Harvard Art Museums. Harvard University. Archived from the original on August 4, 2021.
- ^ "Runaways". MetMuseum. Metropolitan Museum of Art. Archived from the original on January 19, 2022. Retrieved August 17, 2022.
- ^ "Runaways". Kemper Art Museum. Washington University in St. Louis. Archived from the original on December 3, 2021. Retrieved August 17, 2022.
- ^ "MCA - Collection: Runaways". MCA. Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. Archived from the original on April 29, 2022. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Glenn Ligon. Runaways". MoMA. Museum of Modern Art. Archived from the original on April 16, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Runaways". National Gallery of Art. 1993. Archived from the original on July 23, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Runaways". RISD Museum. Rhode Island School of Design. Archived from the original on August 17, 2022. Retrieved August 17, 2022.
- ^ "Runaways, from the series "Runaways"". St. Louis Art Museum. Archived from the original on April 29, 2022. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Runaways". Tang Museum. Skidmore College. Archived from the original on June 24, 2021. Retrieved August 17, 2022.
- ^ "Runaways". Whitney. Whitney Museum. Archived from the original on July 1, 2021. Retrieved August 17, 2022.
- ^ "Wadsworth Atheneum Collection". Wadsworth Atheneum. Archived from the original on June 21, 2023. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Condition Report, Glenn Ligon". Tate. Archived from the original on January 21, 2022. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Malcolm X, Sun, Frederick Douglass, Boy with Bubbles (version 2) #1". Walker. Walker Art Center. Archived from the original on April 28, 2017. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Glenn Ligon. Self Portrait at Eleven Years Old". MoMA. Museum of Modern Art. Archived from the original on October 31, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Untitled". University of Warwick Art Collection. University of Warwick. Archived from the original on August 13, 2020. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Rückenfigur". LACMA. Los Angeles County Museum of Art. Archived from the original on October 18, 2017. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Rückefigur". Whitney. Whitney Museum. Archived from the original on October 14, 2021. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Glenn Ligon". Glenstone. Archived from the original on April 20, 2022. Retrieved May 1, 2022.
- ^ "Warm Broad Glow II". Whitney. Whitney Museum. Archived from the original on July 1, 2021. Retrieved June 29, 2022.
- ^ "Double America". NGA. National Gallery of Art. Archived from the original on May 15, 2021. Retrieved June 12, 2022.
- ^ "Stranger #56". Centre Pompidou (in French). Archived from the original on April 29, 2022. Retrieved April 29, 2022.
- ^ "Live". CrystalBridges. Crystal Bridges Museum of American Art. Archived from the original on December 25, 2022. Retrieved December 25, 2022.
- ^ "Live". NPG. Smithsonian Institution. Archived from the original on July 5, 2022. Retrieved December 25, 2022.
- ^ "Glenn Ligon, Live, 2014". SFMOMA. San Francisco Museum of Modern Art. Archived from the original on November 18, 2021.
- ^ United States Artists Official Website Archived November 10, 2010, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Makeda Easter (October 15, 2018), Hammer Gala raises $2.6 million, honors Margaret Atwood and Glenn Ligon for their socially engaged works Archived March 21, 2019, at the Wayback Machine Los Angeles Times.
- ^ "Meet The New School's 2018 Honorary Degree Recipients". May 17, 2018. Archived from the original on May 21, 2018. Retrieved June 21, 2018.
External links
edit- Annotations Archived February 12, 2005, at the Wayback Machine
- Glenn Ligon: Some changes at Musée d'Art Moderne Grand-Duc Jean - Mudam Luxembourg Archived November 6, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- Glenn Ligon at Regen Projects Archived October 15, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
- National Gallery of Art.