Betye Saar: Call and Response
Betye Saar: Call and Response
Join The Morgan for a virtual guided tour of the exhibition Betye Saar: Call and Response. Saar is known best for incisive collages and assemblage sculptures that confront and reclaim racist images.
FREE
The Morgan Library & Museum online
October 02, 2020 | 3:00 pm
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Morgan Educators

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Advance registration is required to access the Zoom webinar.

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The Morgan Library & Museum
New York, NY

About The Exhibition

Los Angeles–based artist Betye Saar (b. 1926) emerged in the 1960s as a major voice in American art. Part of a wave of artists, many of them African American, who embraced the medium of assemblage, she is known best for incisive collages and assemblage sculptures that confront and reclaim racist images. The daughter of a seamstress, and a printmaker by training, Saar brings to her work a remarkable sensitivity to materials. Her imagery is drawn from popular culture, family history, and a wide range of spiritual traditions. 

This exhibition, conceived in close consultation with the artist, looks at the relationship between Saar’s finished works and the preliminary annotated sketches she has made in small notebooks throughout her career. In addition, the show will include approximately a dozen of Saar’s travel sketchbooks with more finished drawings and collages—often relating to leitmotifs seen across her oeuvre—which she has made over a lifetime of journeys worldwide. Selections will cover the span of her career, from the late 1960s up through a sculptural installation made specifically for this exhibition.

Image: Betye Saar, Sketchbook page for Eye of the Beholder, 1994 / courtesy of the artist and Roberts Projects, Los Angeles, CA