Titus Kaphar, the Artist Who Edits Art History

Published in El País
(Spain) on 8 October 2020
by PEIO H. RIAÑO (link to originallink to original)
Translated from by Madeleine Brink. Edited by Olivia Parker.

 

 

The American painter and sculptor challenges traditional forms that have been dictated by white interests. His new exhibition, located in a church in Brussels, asks why Black people are absent from Catholic painting.

In the United States, African American artists might be arrested leaving the galleries where they have just opened their shows. One day, in just such a circumstance, artist Titus Kaphar and his brother were stopped and questioned by an undercover police officer on suspicion of art theft. This is one of three life events that the painter and sculptor often uses to explain why he creates the art that he creates. The second was during a visit to the Museum of Natural History, where he had taken his 9-year-old son. His son asked a simple question that demonstrated clear insight into historic and systemic inequality. Standing in front of an equestrian statue of Teddy Roosevelt, who was flanked on one side by a Native American and on the other by an African American, Kaphar’s son asked, “Daddy, how come he gets to ride on the horse and those two guys have to walk?”

The 44-year-old artist, born in Michigan and raised between New Haven and California, far from his mother and the violence of his father, grew up with a foster family that supported him in his studies. Kaphar studied art history in college. In one of his classes, his art history professor arrived at the part of the book dedicated to Black artists, but decided to skip it and go on to the next chapter. Even though Kaphar protested, the professor claimed that there was not enough time or interest to cover the material. This was the third event that shaped the artist’s trajectory. Although Kaphar was unable to convince his professor to cover the material, he learned a much more useful lesson for the creative life he was about to embark upon: Exclusion is a part of the formula used to legitimize artistic canons. That which fails to reflect the interests of those who determine the canon stays sidelined. The two most affected groups in such processes are African Americans and women.

That day during Kaphar’s college experience provides us with insight into the essence of his work about the forgotten and about forgetting. About who and what is silenced. Kaphar’s life and works are inseparable. This is always true, but while many have a CV, some have a biography. In Kaphar’s case, his biography is so formative because he was born without privilege. He has nothing to lose, and that fact makes him a threat to social consensus, which historically has often been used by those in power to control artists. Art is the best social glue, but it can also be something more. Kaphar, who designed the cover of Time magazine in June in honor of George Floyd, represents a radical wing. He erases propaganda, corrects the discourse and discovers the truths that art, artists and patrons have hidden. In "Behind the Myth of Benevolence," a linen with a portrait of Thomas Jefferson hangs partly unhooked, revealing behind it another portrait of Sally Hemings, a slave who was the mother of six of Jefferson’s children. The techniques that Kaphar uses to ensure that history be unprejudiced by the traditions of art and beauty are insightful and clear. Just as artists of the past used technical skill to clean up the legacy of those who were honored in portraits, each painting, sculpture or installation that Kaphar creates is a manifesto against hagiography. He rewinds and restores the many blemishes that have been removed and polished over in the course of making art as propaganda, paid for by the highest bidder.

Kaphar also says that the truth is a mark of beauty, and he uses the truth to “open hearts” and begin “difficult conversations.” Kaphar carefully studies the sculptural methods of Robert Rauschenberg and Sam Gilliam, using their, and other, methods to correct falsehoods that are written into the manuals of art history. He doesn’t want to erase or destroy them: Rather, he prefers to confront and discover them. He doesn’t believe in knocking down the statues of Edward Colston or Leopoldo II. He wants to answer them. Although they may be detestable and the majority of these monuments may not reflect contemporary values, Kaphar advocates creative sovereignty. A contemporary artist is capable of tearing down the worn-out references from the past.

In "Columbus Day Painting," Kaphar uses pieces of cloth to hide the famous people who accompany Columbus in the John Vanderlyn painting from 1836. Vanderlyn’s painting was commissioned by Congress and still hangs in the Capitol rotunda, where it has been since 1847. Kaphar converts the famous people into mummy-like figures, and leaves the indigenous men to be the protagonists of the historical moment when Europeans disembarked in the West Indies. In "Shadow of Liberty," Kaphar painted a portrait of George Washington on a horse, nailing strips of canvas to his body. On the strips are printed the names of the slaves that the first president of the U.S. owned. In "Ascension," Kaphar cut out the silhouette of Michael Jordan in full flight, revealing behind him “The Descent from the Cross” by Roger Van Der Weyden, inviting a parallel between Jesus and Jordan.

Art is an opportunist fiction charged by political interests, and Kaphar neutralizes art without fear of discrediting it. He rips apart the artistic myth that imposes respect on centuries’ old ideas, defying white narratives. And he seeks raw reality, up to and including the country’s heart, its founders.

Now, in his new exhibition in a church in Brussels, organized by the Maruani Mercier Gallery, the artist denounces the absence of the Black population in Catholic art history. "The Evidence of Things Unseen" is a vindication of Black Christology and the Blackness of Christ as a person who deeply cared for all people, without discrimination. He uses Western pictorial tradition to subvert that tradition, to rebel against it.

In journalist Ta-Nehisi Coates' book, "Between the World and Me," Coates writes, “Racism — the need to ascribe bone-deep features to people and then humiliate, reduce, and destroy them — inevitably follows from this inalterable condition.” Kaphar twists the canvas, he cuts, folds, and tortures it until it sings, until the truth shines forth and he has discovered just what the images had been made to hide. He silences the propaganda of the art — its origins in a racist culture, and all the accomplices that it has enjoyed throughout time.


El pintor y escultor estadounidense desafía la representación tradicional dictada por los intereses blancos. Su nueva exposición, en una iglesia de Bruselas, se interroga sobre la ausencia de los negros en la pintura católica


En Estados Unidos, los artistas afrodescendientes son arrestados a la salida de la galería en la que acaban de inaugurar una exposición con su obra. Son tan sospechosos en las galerías como en los libros de la historia del arte. Este es uno de los tres acontecimientos vitales que suele contar el pintor y escultor Titus Kaphar para explicar por qué hace lo que hace con el arte. Aquel día su hermano y él fueron detenidos por una patrulla de la policía secreta por robar obras. Otro suceso que le abrió los ojos al racismo en la historia del arte sucedió durante una visita al Museo de Historia Natural con su hijo de 9 años. El pequeño le hizo ver que el arte es cómplice de la desigualdad con una sencilla y espontánea pregunta. Frente a la escultura ecuestre de Teddy Roosevelt, con un nativo americano a un lado y un afroamericano al otro, el niño le dijo: “¿Por qué él va a caballo y ellos caminando?”.

Este artista de 44 años, nacido en Michigan y criado entre New Haven y California, lejos de su madre y de la violencia de su padre, con una familia de acogida gracias a la que pudo estudiar Historia del Arte en la universidad. El curso llegaba al capítulo dedicado a los artistas negros –y aquí llega el tercer episodio determinante para su devenir creativo–, pero la clase saltó y pasó al siguiente ante la indignación de Titus, que se revolvió contra el profesor que alegaba falta de tiempo e interés. El futuro pintor no logró que el maestro se detuviera en la materia que ansiaba conocer, pero entonces aprendió algo mucho más útil para la vida que estaba a punto deestrenar: la exclusión es la fórmula con la que se legitima el canon artístico. Todo lo que no sea como quien escribe el canon queda fuera. La población afrodescendiente y las mujeres son la parte más damnificada.

Ese día en la vida de nuestro protagonista importa para entender la esencia de su trabajo sobre los olvidados y lo olvidado, sobre los silenciados y lo silenciado. La vida de Kaphar y su obra son indisolubles. En el resto de creadores, también. Pero mientras unos tienen currículo, otros tienen biografía. La de Titus Kaphar es determinante porque nació sin privilegios. No tiene nada que perder, y eso le convierte en un peligro para el consenso, con el que el poder ha querido controlar a los artistas. El arte es el mejor pegamento social, pero puede ser algo más que eso. Kaphar, que en junio firmó la portada de la revista Time en honor a George Floyd, representa el ala radical: borra la propaganda, corrige el discurso y descubre la verdad que el arte, los artistas y sus pagadores han escondido. En Behind the Myth of Benevolence (2014) desplaza el lienzo de un retrato de Thomas Jefferson, que oculta uno de Sally Hemings, esclava y madre de seis hijos del tercer presidente de los Estados Unidos. Los gestos que usa Kaphar para que la historia quede libre del arte –y la verdad, de la belleza– son agudos y evidentes. Así como los artistas del pasado usaron sus habilidades técnicas para sanear la memoria de los retratados, cada cuadro, escultura o instalación de Kaphar son manifiestos contra las hagiografías: rebobina hasta manchar a quienes quedaron impolutos por la propaganda a la que se vendió el arte.

Cuenta que la verdad también es una manifestación de la belleza y que la usa para “abrir corazones” y entablar “conversaciones difíciles”. Kaphar mira con detalle los métodos plásticos de Robert Rauschenberg (1925-2008) y de Sam Gilliam (1933), para rectificar las falsedades del manual de la historia del arte. No las borra ni las destruye: prefiere enfrentarse a ellas y descubrirlas. No es partidario de tirar abajo las esculturas de Edward Colston ni de Leopoldo II, sino de contestarlas. Aunque sean “detestables” y la mayoría de esos monumentos nacionales ya no reflejen los valores contemporáneos, aboga por la soberanía creativa. Un artista contemporáneo es capaz de derrotar a los referentes agotados del pasado.

En Columbus Day Painting (2014) usa telas para ocultar los personajes que acompañaron a Colón y que John Vanderlyn pintó en 1836, por encargo del Congreso, en una escena que cuelga todavía en la rotonda del Capitolio desde 1847. Kaphar convierte a los intervenidos en una especie de momias, mientras los nativos del fondo han pasado a ser los protagonistas del momento del desembarco en las Indias occidentales. En Shadows of Liberty (2016) retrató a George Washington a caballo y le clavó tiras de lona en las que imprimió los nombres de los esclavos que poseyó el primer presidente de los EEUU. En Ascension (2016) recorta la silueta de Michael Jordan en pleno vuelo para dejar ver al fondo El descendimiento (1435), de Roger Van Der Weyden, invitando al paralelismo entre Jesús y Jordan.

El arte es una ficción interesada cargada de intereses políticos, que Kaphar neutraliza sin miedo a desacreditarlo. Rompe la camisa del mito artístico que obliga a respetar las ideas de hace siglos, desafía la narrativa blanca sin detenerse ni ante los padres fundadores de su país. Y, ahora, en su nueva exposición en una iglesia de Bruselas, organizada por la galería Maruani Mercier, el artista denuncia la ausencia en la historia de la religión católica de la población negra. The Evidence of Things Unseen es una reivindicación de la cristología negra y la negritud de Cristo como personaje preocupado por todas las personas, sin discriminación. Se apropia de la tradición pictórica occidental y la subvierte para rebelarse contra ella.

El periodista Ta-Nehisi Coates escribió en Entre el mundo y yo (Seix Barral) que “el racismo –la necesidad de asignar a la gente unos rasgos inmutables y luego humillarla, reducirla y destruirla– es la inevitable consecuencia de esta condición inalterable”. Titus Kaphar retuerce los lienzos, los recorta, los dobla y los tortura hasta que los hace cantar, hasta que la verdad aflora y descubre lo que ocultan las imágenes y calla el arte, es decir, los orígenes de la cultura racista y sus cómplices.
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