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Thursday, April 17, 2025

Figuring History Showing At Seattle Art Museum Until May 13

Figuring History: Robert Colescott, Kerry James Marshall, Mickalene Thomas is the featured exhibit at The Seattle Art Museum. The exhibit, which show now thru May 13, features three leading American artists from three generations whose work redefines history painting in a contemporary context. The large-scale paintings on view are distinctive in style, subject matter, and in the historic moments they reference, but collectively they critique and redefine mainstream narratives of history and representation. In   their portrayals, these artists provide testimony centered on Black experience.

The genre of history painting occupies a privileged place in the history of European art. Beginning in the Renaissance with representations of mythological, religious, and literary themes, the most famous artists of the time were commissioned to commemorate pivotal historical events that defined national identities. These large-scale works, done in the grand style, were displayed in ceremonial venues and celebrated the ruling class. Colescott, Marshall, and Thomas all lay claim to the history of the genre, but with a poignant retelling of American history from a Black perspective, giving prominence to histories and individuals that have been erased or suppressed.

The exhibition features loans from several institutions and collections, as well as works from SAM’s collection, including the recently acquired Les Demoiselles d’Alabama: Vestidas (1985) by Colescott. In addition, Mickalene Thomas plans to make new works specifically for the exhibition.

“We are thrilled to bring together the extraordinary work of Robert Colescott, Kerry James Marshall, and Mickalene Thomas at the Seattle Art Museum,” says Kimerly Rorschach, SAM’s Illsley Ball Nordstrom Director and CEO. “The urgent themes of Figuring History reflect the museum’s mission to be a place where exciting and challenging questions—even of our own institution—can be asked.”

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Figuring History opens a door into a labyrinth of questions,” says Catharina Manchanda, SAM’s Jon & Mary Shirley Curator of Modern & Contemporary Art. “Who writes history, who is present in its accounts—but also how do we square, reassess, and go forth with the artistic, social, and political histories that we have all inherited? These artists and their work speak about the past as much as the present.”

In conjunction with the exhibition, the Seattle Art Museum will publish a full- color exhibition catalogue, also titled Figuring History: Robert Colescott, Kerry James Marshall, Mickalene Thomas. It will feature an introduction by Catharina Manchanda, essays by art historians Lowery Stokes Sims and Jacqueline Francis, and interviews with Kerry James Marshall and Mickalene Thomas.

ROBERT COLESCOTT (1925-2009)

Born in Oakland, California, Robert Colescott witnessed the Great Depression in his early years and later served in the Army during World War II. Several years of studies and teachings in France and Egypt following the war gave him an outside perspective and critical edge on the racial conflicts in the United States. The cartoon-like aesthetic of his earlier works take to task celebrated milestones in the history of painting from Van Eyck to Picasso. A decade later, he applies his boldly expressive style to stories that weave the fate of ordinary individuals into the fabric of stories weighed down by the colonial past.

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He poses his subjects as observers, agents, and narrators of an incomplete history, in need of revision.

KERRY JAMES MARSHALL (b. 1955)

Kerry James Marshall was born in Birmingham, Alabama; he and his family moved to the Watts neighborhood of Los Angeles in 1963, a formative time and place for the artist, who now lives and works in Chicago. Marshall’s commanding portraits and tableaux combine familiar representational forms, such as the portrait of the artist or the academic life-drawing class, with political references that frame deeply probing historical narratives.

MICKALENE THOMAS (b. 1971

Mickalene Thomas’ monumental portraits and nudes of women recall the odalisques and muses familiar from a long line of European art history. Her figures do not lend themselves to passive consumption but are powerful agents who confront us. Material culture and the aesthetics of ornamentation play a central role in her work as she inflects and reimagines Matisse’s arabesques and quasi-cubist spaces through the aesthetics of contemporary fashion and style. The power dynamics shift profoundly as Thomas negotiates gender and sexuality through a contemporary female gaze.

PROGRAMS AND EVENTS

Sat., Mar 24

Family Fun Workshop: Poses and Postures Seattle Art Museum

10 am–12:30 pm

Explore images in Figuring History and get an introduction to figure drawing. For ages 6-10 and caregivers. Presented by Delta Air Lines and Target.

Sponsored by RealNetworks Foundation.

Wed., Mar 28

Complex Exchange: Figuring Black Futures Today 7–9 pm

Seattle Art Museum

Presented in partnership with the Northwest African American Museum, Complex Exchange pairs Seattle community members from varying disciplines in a series of conversations related to issues of race, power, politics, and representation inspired by exhibitions on view at both institutions.

Sponsored by Starbucks Coffee Company.

Fri., Mar 30

SAM Remix

8 pm – midnight Seattle Art Museum

#SAMRemix returns, jam-packed with eclectic performances, tours, dancing, creating, and exploring SAM’s collection and special exhibitions. Revive at Remix, a lively late-night out inspired by Figuring History.

Remix is sponsored by Delta Air Lines and Starbucks Coffee Company. Media sponsors are The Stranger and KEXP 90.3 FM.

Sat., Apr 7

Family Fun Workshop: All That Glitters 10 am–12:30 pm

Seattle Art Museum

Roll up your sleeves and get arty with unconventional materials to create a mixed-media masterpiece inspired by Figuring History. For ages 3-6 and caregivers.

Presented by Delta Air Lines and Target. Sponsored by RealNetworks Foundation.

Sat., Apr 14

Legendary Children 8–11 pm

Seattle Art Museum

Join us for a night of the beautiful, transgressive, and unique as we celebrate QTPOC communities. Featuring some of Seattle’s most talented queer artists, this event invites you to join in conversations sparked by Figuring History.

Sat., Apr 21

Family Fun Workshop: Collage and Construct 10 am–12:30 pm

Seattle Art Museum

Step outside the box and construct your own 3-D sculpture inspired by materials you see in Figuring History. For ages 6-10 and caregivers.

Presented by Delta Air Lines and Target. Sponsored by RealNetworks Foundation.

Fri., May 4

Teen Night Out 7–10 pm

Seattle Art Museum

For teens by teens! Make the museum yours during this action-packed night for high school-age teens only. Inspired by Figuring History, this free event features DJs, teen art tours, and art-making led by local contemporary artists.

Support for teen programs is provided by Hearst Foundations.

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