Kara Walker: Pony tricks or Variations?

Kara Walker‘s work is rarely compared to Cindy Sherman‘s, but they share a similarity I’m not sure I like. ‘One trick pony’ is a hackneyed enough phrase, but that is what I called Cindy Sherman’s work in another post. Her images of herself in costume take on different guises, but ultimately they are all photos of Sherman as someone else. Kara Walker does not take photographs and does not use her own image, but instead takes the history of the South and gives it a modern, darker spin dealing with race and sexuality.

Walker’s body of work is more varied than Sherman’s. In her graphic depictions of gender and racial inequalities,Walker is recognized by her Victorian-style silhouettes but she has also used watercolors, video, painting, and shadow puppets. Her works range from letter sized to room sized. While often working in stark black on white, she also uses color.


In the autumn of 2007, Walker’s work not only opened in galleries in Manhattan, but she had a solo show at the Whitney and a self-curated show at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Seeing all her work was a treat. All the more reason why I regret drawing this comparison, but she and Sherman are both one trick ponies.


Her transgressive images of black stereotypes tell a part of Southern history that deserves to be told, but by now I think she has exhausted that combination of style and subject. By the time I had seen all of her work in its many forms and shows, I felt they were variations on a theme.

Variations on a theme are certainly a way of exploring a topic, but I’m not sure that Walker is saying something new. As I honestly enjoy her work ( and Sherman’s for that matter), maybe I’m being too harsh a judge. I just learned the value of such variations at a new play recently. On the other hand, even Beethoven stopped at 33. Perhaps a truly great artist knows when a theme has been exhausted?

Vaseline, Serra, and Barney

Hello Sunday morning…and hello hangover. Looking for a fun distraction to keep you from thought of work tomorrow? Hey, me too.

That’s how I came across this clip of Matthew Barney filming his best known work, the Cremaster cycle. In it, we see Richard Serra, who is one of the actors in this piece, shoveling Vaseline and hear Barney talk about earlier artists’ work and physicality.

This video is one of many interesting clips on art21‘s YouTube channel. Art21, a part of PBS, is a non-profit that presents artists at work and in their own words. They have hundreds of great clips to check out, featuring artists from Kara Walker to Bruce Nauman to Sally Man. Even if a gore-smeared Barney directing is too much, you won’t be thinking about Monday morning.

$5 Art (that’s not on a poster)? OK!


Red Deer – Bibliotheque German Parliament – Berlin by artists Maslen & Mehra, limited edition number 3 of 5, Durst Lambda print on aluminum and silicon mounted acrylic.

Enough said–here’s my credit card.

The above print (valued at $3,600) is being raffled off by BECA (Bridge for Emerging Contemporary Art) gallery. BECA’s program for emerging artists has come under financial strain, as have many in the current market. One of it’s supporters has donated Red Deer by Maslen and Mehra, and the gallery is raffling it off to raise money. For $5 dollars, this is an art lovers lottery! Not to mention that by buying a ticket you support emerging artists. Click here to buy tickets and learn more about BECA. Click here to learn more about Maslen and Mehra’s strongly formulated work, which deals with the modern relationship to our environment.

Now if only Sotheby’s would get the same idea.