Untitled
Artist/Maker
Belkis Ayón Manso
(Cuban, 1967–1999)
Date1999
MediumOffset color lithograph
DimensionsImage: 17 9/16 × 23 3/4 in. (44.6 × 60.3 cm)
Sheet: 20 × 28 in. (50.8 × 71.1 cm)
Sheet: 20 × 28 in. (50.8 × 71.1 cm)
Credit LineRichard Lee Ripin Art Purchase Fund
Edition23/40
Object number2018.1
Status
Not on viewManso (Meek), like all of Belkis Ayón’s works, explores the origin myths of Abakuá, a famously secretive Cuban religious fraternity. As in similar societies from the Cross River region in Nigeria and Cameroon, Abakuá’s origin story in Cuba is based on an act of female betrayal wherein Sikán, a woman who accidentally learned a secret she should not know, divulges it and is killed for her misdeed.
Ayón’s elaborate prints bring Sikán back to life, and partly serve as representations of Ayón’s own bold artistic and personal transgressions. Though not religious, she explored religious themes in a time when the Cuban government was suspicious of them; though dealing with quintessentially Cuban subjects, she showed little interest in Cubanidad (Cuban identity) as an aesthetic movement; and though a woman, her work was preoccupied with the symbolism of an image-eschewing, all-men’s society.
Exhibition History
Ayón’s elaborate prints bring Sikán back to life, and partly serve as representations of Ayón’s own bold artistic and personal transgressions. Though not religious, she explored religious themes in a time when the Cuban government was suspicious of them; though dealing with quintessentially Cuban subjects, she showed little interest in Cubanidad (Cuban identity) as an aesthetic movement; and though a woman, her work was preoccupied with the symbolism of an image-eschewing, all-men’s society.
Afterlives of the Black Atlantic
- Allen Memorial Art Museum, Oberlin, OH (January 20, 2019 - May 24, 2020 )
Collections
- Modern & Contemporary
This record was created from historic documentation and may not have been reviewed by a curator. Noticed a mistake? Have some extra information about this object?
Please contact us.
1988
1995
1996
1952
1952
1997
late 20th–early 21st century
1978