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Modern Art Monday Presents: Hank Willis Thomas, Liberty


Liberty (2015): Fiberglass with Chameleon Auto Paint Finish (Photo By Gail)

In Liberty, Hank Willis Thomas renders a two-dimensional image as a three dimensional sculpture — modeled after an original photograph that appeared in Life Magazine in 1986, which featured a Harlem Globetrotter in front of the Statue of Liberty, spinning a basketball on his finger. Interested in popular culture, photographic history and sports as a metaphor for individual and collective struggle, Thomas created a life-size sculpture of the moment by casting the arm of retired NBA All-Star, Juwan Howard.

Liberty is part of Thomas’s Punctum series, which draws inspiration from the French philosopher Roland Barthes’s idea of the punctum: that “element which rises from the [photographic] scene, shoots out of it like an arrow, and pierces,” Using this concept as his foundation, Thomas selects a specific area of an image and re-presents it as Sculpture. Through cropping and isolation, he encourages us to contemplate framing itself: what is left in or out of a photographs, narrative, or an account of a historical event, and why?

Photographed in the Brooklyn Museum.

 


Filed under: Uncategorized Tagged: Arm, Art, Artist, Basketball, Brooklyn Museum, Hank Willis Thomas, Harlem Globetotters, Juwan Howard, Liberty, Modern Art Monday, Punctum, Roland Barthes, Sculpture, Statue of Liberty


This post first appeared on The Worleygig | Pop Culture • Art • Music •, please read the originial post: here

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Modern Art Monday Presents: Hank Willis Thomas, Liberty

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