Artist Interview—Wangechi Mutu: The NewOnes, will free Us | Met Exhibitions

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My name is Wangechi Mutu. I'm a visual artist, born in Kenya, Nairobi. I feel like this particular commission of asking a contemporary artist to place something in these niches in the facade of The Metropolitan, for me, is one of the most proactive moves that a museum could make at this particular moment. The space has been empty since the Museum was built. When The Met approached me about this idea, I was actually looking at caryatids. Caryatids, throughout history, have carried these buildings to express the might and the wealth of a particular place. In Greek architecture, you see these women in their beautiful robes, and then in African sculpture across the continent you see these women either kneeling or sitting, sometimes holding a child, as well as holding up the seat of the king. It felt like this was a very ubiquitous position for women across many, many histories. How do I use this figure to change this conversation and this issue? I wanted to keep the D.N.A. of the woman in an active pose, but I didn't want her to carry the weight of something or someone else. The process of taking it from drawing into 3D has been quite epic. Once these molds had been produced in a much larger scale, I really worked hard to individualize everything that really expresses humanity to us. After they had been cast in bronze, I went in to work on the patinas. And that's when I was going to have to go in and paint them in fire and really make them alive. Because they're going to be in front of all of these people, I wanted these things to be about how form and material actually impacts us. How they look is very much about what they mean. I created these coils that I've put all the way around their bodies that felt tactile and living and fleshy, but at the same time really protected the women and gave them kind of a privacy and a regal nature. They became almost like soldiers, like they were in armor. And the circular form actually comes from traditional African adornment: Ethiopian, Sudanese tribes that have these incredible lip plates. They're mostly worn by women of status. So I've turned them into mirrors. They're able to take light and twist it around; they're able to flash at you from a distance. Women's bodies are always at the front of so much of the expression, the hostility, the magnificence of how humankind sees itself. I think of these women as characters that have the capacity, the freedom, and the opportunity to be where they need to be, to say what they have to say. They're here, and they're present, and they've arrived.
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Channel: The Met
Views: 37,144
Rating: 4.9447985 out of 5
Keywords: exhibition promo, 6085728584001, 1601128, Art, Museum, History, New York, New York City, Education, New, Current, Upcoming, The Met, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, wangechi mutu, contemporary art, contemporary artist, sculpture, stories, caryatids, art commission, art process, behind the scenes, greek architecture, facade, architecture, african sculpture, bronze, museum commission, soldiers, armor, patinas, african adornment, Interview, Stories, Gallery, artist interview, female artist
Id: MQgCX7HZoW0
Channel Id: undefined
Length: 3min 4sec (184 seconds)
Published: Fri Sep 13 2019
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