Ken Gonzales-Day’s work confronts the role of the visual in
conveying history or in history’s absences, including those bodies
and spaces deliberately erased, forgotten, or never acknowledged. As
illustrated and discussed in Ken Gonzales-Day: History’s
“Nevermade,” his photography, films, drawings, and paintings
interrogate race and power, questioning how bodies are seen, rendered,
or made invisible. His art moves between presence and absence,
compelling viewers to confront their own position in relation to
systems of oppression and representation. This volume, accompanying
the exhibition of the same name, offers the first comprehensive study
of Gonzales-Day’s practice. Organized around his major series,
sections of the book—including Rethinking History, Collecting Race,
Forging Community, and Redrawing Boundaries— explore how his work
engages with archives, bodies, museums, and public space to challenge
institutional narratives. Through critical analysis and illustrated
throughout, Ken Gonzales-Day: History’s “Nevermade” illuminates
the profound political and theoretical stakes of his art. Essential
reading for students, scholars, and practitioners in art history,
photography, museum studies, American history, and decolonial and
queer studies, this book is a testament to the power of art to reckon
with the past and imagine new futures.
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History’s “Nevermade”
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781835951385
Publisert
2025
Utgiver
Ingram Publisher Services UK- Academic
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter