VIDEO:Roxane Gay on Julie Mehretu
“Every inch of canvas is visually arresting. The parts are as compelling as the whole. To say it is beautiful is to do the work a disservice. Instead, it is overwhelming,” the acclaimed writer says of a massive painting by American painter Julie Mehretu, who she feels “disrupts the discipline of architectural drawings” and imposes her artistic will.
“I admire the audacity of that, of using architectural drawings not as instructive but rather, as deconstructive,” Gay continues, sharing her thoughts on Mehretu’s painting ‘Easy Dark’ (2007).
Roxane Gay (b. 1974) is an American writer. She is the author of several books including ‘Ayiti’ (2011), ‘An Untamed State’ (2014), ‘Bad Feminist’ (2014), ‘Difficult Women’ (2017), and ‘Hunger – A Memoir of (My) Body’ (2017). She is the recipient of several prestigious awards including two 2018 Lambda Literary Awards – the Trustee Award and for Bisexual Nonfiction (‘Hunger’).
Julie Mehretu (b.1970) is an American artist, who works in the field of painting, drawing and printmaking. Mehretu is particularly known for her large-scale, gestural paintings that are built up through layers of acrylic paint on canvas overlaid with mark-making using pencil, pen, ink and thick streams of pain. Her work has been exhibited at the Sydney Biennial (2006), Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum in New York (2010), La Biennale di Venezia (2019), and Los Angeles County Museum of Art (2019), among others. Mehretu has received several prestigious awards including the U.S. Department of State Medal of Arts Award in 2015.
In the video, Roxane Gay reads a text about Julie Mehretu. The text is called ’The Perfect Equilibrium’, and the focus of the text is ‘Easy Dark’, 2007 by Julie Mehretu written for the anthology ‘Looking Writing Reading Looking – Writers on Art from the Louisiana Collection’ (2019).
Cover photo: Julie Mehretu, Easy Dark (Detail), 2007, © Julie Mehretu, All rights reserved. DACS / VISDA 2020
Roxane Gay on Julie Mehretu, Edited by Kasper Bech Dyg , Produced by Kasper Bech Dyg and Christian Lund, Sound recordings by Pejk Malinovski, © Louisiana Channel, Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, 2020, Supported by Nordea-fonden
: