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Essays
- Meeting in the Moment: The Black Feminism of Faith Ringgold and Betye Saar in the 1960s and Beyond
- Power to the People Faith Ringgold’s Black Panther Posters
- An Imprint of Histories from the Artists’ Studio Windows
- Betye Saar and Faith Ringgold: Printing New Possibilities at The Fabric Workshop and Museum
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Virtual Tour
- Matterport Tour of Exhibition
- Introduction to exhibition
- Betye Saar "Untitled"
- Betye Saar, "Now You Cookin’ with Gas,"
- Betye Saar, "The Long Memory"
- Faith Ringgold, "Committee to Defend the Panthers"
- Faith Ringgold, "Martin Luther King, Jr. Letter from Birmingham City Jail"
- Faith Ringgold, "You Put the Devil in Me "
- Faith Ringgold, "Declaration of Freedom and Independence"
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Alison
Title
Alison
Description
Betye’s printmaking studio was located in a dedicated room in her Laurel Canyon home during her daughters’ youth, but the acids and machinery involved in intaglio printmaking meant the studio was generally off-limits to the young children. However, the girls still made their way into Saar’s studio symbolically by appearing in her family-focused prints. In this portrait-print, seven-year-old Alison’s face fills the frame, her head conforming to the rectangular shape of the metal plate on which Betye etched her second daughter’s likeness. Large, inquisitive eyes meet the viewers gaze, and we are invited to imagine a mother’s gaze returned by one of the little muses she sees just outside her home-studio each day.
“As children, my sisters and I were taken to museums and art openings like some kids go to baseball games and the zoo.” —Tracye Saar-Cavanaugh
“As children, my sisters and I were taken to museums and art openings like some kids go to baseball games and the zoo.” —Tracye Saar-Cavanaugh
Creator
Betye Saar
Date
1963
Format
Etching
Provenance
Collection of Julie Farr
Files
Citation
Betye Saar, “Alison,” Ringgold | Saar: Meeting on the Matrix, accessed November 21, 2024, https://black-printmaking.artinterp.org/items/show/46.