黑料不打烊


Unmasking Masculinity For The 21st Century

24 Sep, 2022 - 29 Dec, 2022

Presenting works culled from the KIA鈥檚 collection, combined with borrowed works from around the U.S., Unmasking Masculinity for the 21st Century will investigate how artists use tradition, contemporary practice, and performance to explore the construction of masculinity in North America. Co-curated by Rehema Barber, Chief Curator of the KIA, and highly acclaimed independent curator Larry Ossei-Mensah, they seek to create an exhibition that is also a forum to engage the community in conversations led by artists, community members, and scholars.

Unmasking Masculinity for the 21st Century aims to survey the construction of masculinity among diverse communities and individuals, as well as how artists have responded to, reframed, or reclaimed the concept of masculinity throughout the 20th and 21st centuries. Throughout the nearly a-year period that Unmasking Masculinity explores, the exhibition seeks to present a wide range of representations of masculinity. The exhibition explores the construction of masculinity beyond biological traits to examine the ways in which it intersects with various social factors such as gender, race, sexuality, and socioeconomic status. Unmasking Masculinity investigates how all of these factors continue to influence understandings of masculine identities today.

Artworks within the exhibition by Nate Lewis, jc lenochan, James Luna, Catherine Opie, and others will delve into the impacts of colonization and imperialism, socioeconomic status, and socialization during adolescence in establishing society鈥檚 understandings of masculinity. Other works by artists like Keith Anderson, Kahlil Joseph, Juliana Huxtable, and Cheryl Pope will examine the psychological influences and ideological systems that affect contemporary understandings of masculinity. Works by artists such as Jaishri Abichandani, Brendan Fernandes, Lyle Ashton Harris, and Arthur Jafa will speak to the mythologies surrounding masculinity, while challenging dominant social mores dictating sexual identity.


Presenting works culled from the KIA鈥檚 collection, combined with borrowed works from around the U.S., Unmasking Masculinity for the 21st Century will investigate how artists use tradition, contemporary practice, and performance to explore the construction of masculinity in North America. Co-curated by Rehema Barber, Chief Curator of the KIA, and highly acclaimed independent curator Larry Ossei-Mensah, they seek to create an exhibition that is also a forum to engage the community in conversations led by artists, community members, and scholars.

Unmasking Masculinity for the 21st Century aims to survey the construction of masculinity among diverse communities and individuals, as well as how artists have responded to, reframed, or reclaimed the concept of masculinity throughout the 20th and 21st centuries. Throughout the nearly a-year period that Unmasking Masculinity explores, the exhibition seeks to present a wide range of representations of masculinity. The exhibition explores the construction of masculinity beyond biological traits to examine the ways in which it intersects with various social factors such as gender, race, sexuality, and socioeconomic status. Unmasking Masculinity investigates how all of these factors continue to influence understandings of masculine identities today.

Artworks within the exhibition by Nate Lewis, jc lenochan, James Luna, Catherine Opie, and others will delve into the impacts of colonization and imperialism, socioeconomic status, and socialization during adolescence in establishing society鈥檚 understandings of masculinity. Other works by artists like Keith Anderson, Kahlil Joseph, Juliana Huxtable, and Cheryl Pope will examine the psychological influences and ideological systems that affect contemporary understandings of masculinity. Works by artists such as Jaishri Abichandani, Brendan Fernandes, Lyle Ashton Harris, and Arthur Jafa will speak to the mythologies surrounding masculinity, while challenging dominant social mores dictating sexual identity.


Contact details

314 South Park Street Kalamazoo, MI, USA 49007
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