Signifying identity: art and race in Romare Bearden's projections
Lee Stephens GlazerLEE STEPHENS GLAZER, "Signifying Identity: Art and Race in Romare Bearden's Projections"
In 1964, Romare Bearden exhibited a series of images of black life entitled Projections, initiating the improvisation on canonical art history and the challenge to popular stereotypes of African Americans that would characterize much of his subsequent work. Informed by Bearden's appropriation of Andre Malraux's idea that art is a continuously evolving semiotic system, the collages and photostat enlargements that comprise Projections participate in a complex, intertextual process of signifying identity that is one of the master tropes of African American cultural expression.--Art Bulletin, LXXVI, 3, 1994, 411-26.
COPYRIGHT 1994 College Art Association
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