{"id":9853,"date":"2021-07-10T13:08:32","date_gmt":"2021-07-10T13:08:32","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/media-archive.blackartinamerica.com\/?p=9853"},"modified":"2021-07-14T12:54:23","modified_gmt":"2021-07-14T12:54:23","slug":"9853","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/earthexhibitions.org\/media-archive\/?p=9853","title":{"rendered":"How Monuments Are Re-telling American History"},"content":{"rendered":"
by Yvonne Bynoe<\/span><\/pre>\nArt allows us to expand our vision of who we are and, for Black Americans, also who we have been.<\/p>\n
In September 2019, Kehinde Wiley\u2019s first work of public art, Rumors of War<\/em>, was unveiled in Times Square in New York City. It’s a breathtaking monument that presents a Black man as a heroic figure on horseback. The 27-foot high, 16-foot wide bronze sculpture is mounted on an impressive limestone base.<\/p>\nSimilar to Wiley’s paintings that position contemporary Black men in poses from classical works, the horseman with his dreadlocked hair and sneakers seems modern but not wholly. Rumors of War<\/em> isn’t depicting a martyr or an outlaw, the common designations assigned to Black men. Perhaps Wiley’s monument is saying that powerful Black men like the rider have always existed and will always exist.<\/p>\nWiley reportedly conceived of the sculpture in 2016 when he visited the Virginia Museum of Fine Art in Richmond for the opening of his exhibition Kehinde Wiley: A New Republic<\/em>. Wiley gained international celebrity after President Barack Obama chose him to paint his 2018 official portrait that now hangs in the National Portrait Gallery.<\/p>\nWhile visiting the Virginia Museum of Fine Art, Wiley was struck by a statue of General J.E.B. Stuart and its evocation of the “Lost Cause” ideology, which erases the sins of slavery and claims that the Confederate states honorably fended off Northern aggression.<\/p>\n
English novelist George Orwell coined the term \u201cdoublethink,\u201d which refers to the process of holding two contradictory beliefs at the same time (and actually believing them both to be true). For more than 150 years, through doublethink, the descendants of Confederates have used monuments to transform seditionists and slaveholders into heroes. On April 9,1865, Confederate general Robert E. Lee surrendered to the Union Army by commanding one of his soldiers to wave a dishcloth near the Appomattox Courthouse. Despite losing the Civil War, Lee has been memorialized as a patriot who valiantly defended his country.<\/p>\n
Dr. W.E.B. Du Bois, scholar, activist and co-founder of the National Association of the Advancement of Colored People (N.A.A.C.P), believed that Southerners, through their monuments, mythologized the Confederacy as a means to keep Black Americans as second-class citizens. He sarcastically addressed their selective memory and history in a 1931 issue of The Crisis<\/em> magazine saying:<\/p>\nIn the South, particularly, human ingenuity has been put in to explain on its monuments, the Confederacy. Of course, the plain truth of the matter would be an inscription something like: \u201cSacred to the memory of those who fought to Perpetuate Human Slavery.\u201d But that reads with increasing difficulty as time goes on. It does, however, seem to be overdoing it to read on a North Carolina Confederate monument: \u201cDied Fighting for Liberty!\u201d<\/em><\/p><\/blockquote>\n