Black Celebrity
Year of Creation:
2019
Media:
Digital Collage
Dimensions:
Variable
Interaction Type:
Not Interactive
Duration:
None
Description:
A digital collage confronts the spectacle of Black suffering as media commodity. A lynched figure hangs from a tree, another echoed in the background. The tree itself bears the visage of Ida B. Wells, anti-lynching journalist and activist, transforming the landscape into an archive of witness. To the left, paparazzi swarm with cameras, capturing death as spectacle. A crow hovers nearby, both omen and witness. The background glows with bright yellow-orange patterns, recalling propaganda posters or digital grids—suggesting how violence is staged and circulated. The figure’s posture, including the act of masturbation, intensifies the work’s critique: Black bodies are doubly exposed, their death and sexuality consumed as images. The piece insists on the paradox of visibility—where representation can both expose injustice and reproduce spectacle.
Core Question:
When does visibility empower, and when does it exploit?