Amber Jamilla Musser
Amber Jamilla Musser is Professor of English at CUNY Graduate Center and the author of Sensational Flesh: Race, Power, and Masochism (NYU, 2014) and Sensual Excess: Queer Femininity and Brown Jouissance (NYU Press, 2018).
KENT MONKMAN with Amber Jamilla Musser
In this moment of institutional and personal reckoning about the legacy of settler-colonialism and violence against Indigenous people, Kent Monkmans work invites provocative intersections with the canon of Western European and American art history while exploring themes such as sexuality, colonization, loss, and resilience. Monkman is an interdisciplinary visual artist and member of the Fisher River Cree Nation in Treaty Five territory, Manitoba.
In Conversation
Mickalene Thomas with Amber Jamilla Musser
Amber Jamilla Musser speaks with Mickalene Thomas about the artists processes of art-making, collaboration, and portraiture.
In Conversation
Jennifer Packer with Amber Jamilla Musser
Amber Jamilla Musser sits down with Jennifer Packer to discuss Blackness, painting, and temporality. The lively conversation roams through art history, Black feminisms, and the political import of shifting hierarchies of valuation.
Architectures of Blue: Race, Representation, and Black and Brown Abstraction
By Amber Jamilla MusserNow is the time to rethink the relationship between race and representation. This is not about simply increasing the number of minority artists, critics, and art consumers, but a question of re-imagining what representation could look like when we think expansively through the affective parameters of race.
Kyle Dunn: Night Pictures
By Amber Jamilla MusserKyle Dunns Night Pictures offers quiet, intimate scenes that hum with depth. Under the rubric of domesticitycocktails, dogs, and fashionable garmentsthe show brings together a wealth of ambivalent emotions, seemingly brought about by the days slide into night.
King Cobra: White Meat
By Amber Jamilla MusserWhat happens when whiteness is put on display? This is the question at the heart of King Cobras White Meat, a show that illuminates the sadism, power, and playfulness of the artist even as it portrays varieties of whiteness as threat, as diseased, and as contagion.
Get Lifted! The Art of the Ecstatic
By Maureen Catbagan and Amber Jamilla MusserIn a world that feels more constricted with climate catastrophes and social restrictions, how does one lift? How does one get beyond the borders of a compressed body, a compressed language of the self? How does one begin to transcend to a space of release, to a space of flow, to a space of euphoric joy?
Toyin Ojih Odutola: When Legends Die
By Amber Jamilla MusserThis is not an exhibit that insists on presenting wealth as loud and spectacular. Rather, wealth is what permits contemplation.
Rashid Johnson: Untitled Anxious Red Drawings
By Amber Jamilla MusserThese are frantic times defined by uncertainty, emergency, and dread. Worse, there is seldom space for anything else. Johnson ’s drawings capture these heightened emotional states, but instead of producing catharsis, they keep viewers hanging in the air.
Doreen Garner:The Remains
By Amber Jamilla MusserIn the back room of JTT, held by subtle spotlights, there is a gathering of flesh: it is arranged package-like so that each side folds over to almost meet in the center, revealing a tender interior. This is Doreen Garners meditation on Black gender, a theorization that moves us toward multiple valences of enfleshment.
Toyin Ojih Odutola: Tell Me A Story, I Don’t Care If It’s True
By Amber Jamilla MusserTell Me A Story, I Dont Care If Its True is comprised of portraits of Black people made from colored pencil, graphite, and ink. These are not images of captureno one seems to acknowledge the viewers.
Sonya Clark: Monumental Cloth, The Flag We Should Know
By Maureen Catbagan and Amber Jamilla MusserSonya Clark illuminates the profound entanglement between our current moment and the Civil War by putting her body on the line.
Chitra Ganesh: A city will share her secrets if you know how to ask
By Amber Jamilla MusserAs this years QUEERPOWER commission, Chitra Ganesh has filled 10 panels of Leslie Lohmans façade with images of queer activism, joy, and meditations on history, possibility, and gentrification.
PÒTOPRENS: The Urban Artists of Port-au-Prince
By Maureen Catbagan and Amber Jamilla MusserPÒTOPRENS is a feast for the eyes. Occupying three floors at Pioneer Works in Brooklyn, the show brings together twenty-five contemporary artists working in different mediums in order to showcase Haitian art, much of which has not previously been displayed in the United States. This breadth is a deliberate curatorial choice; it reflects the city’s geography and the resultant microcosms of artistic communities, and is a confirmation of the vigor and aesthetic prowess of Haiti’s artists.
God Made My Face: A Collective Portrait of James Baldwin
By Amber Jamilla MusserThe sound of James Baldwin’s voice greets visitors first. It originates from a Victrola record player, unceremoniously placed on the floor in the back of the first room, which plays a 1932 recording on vinyl of Baldwin singing “Take My Hand, Precious Lord.”
Kerry James Marshall: Exquisite Corpse: This is Not the Game
By Amber Jamilla MusserRepresentation can trap, but, Marshall suggests, there is also always a lot more going on underneath the surface. Excavating these corpses reveals portions of the (exquisite) breadth of permutations (past, present, and futural) for Black life and Black ways of living.
Lorna Simpson: Darkening
By Maureen Catbagan and Amber Jamilla MusserThe mood is somber and monumental. Blue ink washes over icebergs, enlarged strips of newsprint, and images of Black women.
Maureen Catbagan
By Amber Jamilla MusserWithout many of its external markers, the phenomenology of time has been profoundly altered: we exist in a constant negotiation between realities and temporalities. In its excavation of memoryboth personal and collectiveMaureen Catbagans recent painting series plumbs the psychological space of this uncertainty.
TRACEY MOFFATT: Vigils and Travellers
By Maureen Catbagan and Amber Jamilla MusserMulvey shows us that the power of the gaze operates by producing or reifying distance between the one who watches, who is presumed to have power, and the object of the gaze, who is assumed to lack it.
Sable Elyse Smith: BOLO: Be on (the) Lookout
By Amber Jamilla MusserIn its presentation of innocence that isn’t quite, Sable Elyse Smith makes criminality the absent center of the show; it haunts, but is not depicted.
Jonathan Lyndon Chase: Big Wash
By Amber Jamilla MusserChase uses the laundromat to illustrate how practices of the quotidianwashing, herecan bring together individual needs and vulnerabilities into a form of collective possibility, showing the ways that care (both of the self and others) is fundamental to community.
Jacob Lawrence: The Life of Toussaint L’Ouverture
By Amber Jamilla MusserWhat does history look like? Jacob Lawrence's series of fifteen prints on Toussaint L'Ouverture, displayed at DC Moore gallery, invites us to contemplate the complexities of a historiographic intervention within the context of aesthetics.
Jacolby Satterwhite
By Amber Jamilla MusserWhat we do see throughout Room for Living, however, are numerous forms of indebtednessto the canon and, importantly, to Satterwhites mother. Elements of Patricia suffuse the exhibit. The LED texts that surround several sculptures are made from her words and handwriting, the drawings of bathtub, penises on wheels, and shoes are taken from her notebooks.
Yukultji Napangati
By Maureen Catbagan and Amber Jamilla MusserYukultji Napangati paints timelinesyellow and orange dots connected by undulations that curve and spiral, submerging the viewer within the immensity of a vibrating sea. Time through lines, and yet outside of time.
Jennifer Packer: M. Heller
By Amber Jamilla MusserIt's the green that really catches my eye; it forms the texture of the sitter's pants. As I keep looking, I notice other detailsthe couch cushions, the strong profile, the palm fronds in the background. The background is warm and diffuse, but rather than look at the viewer, the sitter is paying attention to somethinga phone?in his hands. This is a portrait of absorption; it is also one of intimacy. I'll be honest, the sitter reminds me of my brother.
Interspecies Futures, Veiled Taxonomies, and Lights, Tunnels, Passages, and Shadows
at Center for Book Arts
By Amber Jamilla Musser
All three exhibitions manifest theorist Donna Haraways concept of sympoiesis and use the forms of the book to enlarge what constitutes knowledge and being together. In these profound (and profoundly different) engagements with sensing, we realize that the book not only contains knowledge, but also invites ethicshow can and should humans engage?
Fountain House Gallery
By Amber Jamilla MusserAmber Musser profiles the Fountain House Gallery.