How Kehinde Wiley is reshaping the monumental

Published 2023-03-17
Exploring the life and work of artist Kehinde Wiley, this film takes viewers on a journey from Wiley’s upbringing in South Central Los Angeles to his ascent as one of the world’s most iconic visual artists. Featuring interviews with the artist, his twin brother Taiwo Wiley, and his close friend and fellow artist Mickalene Thomas, the film was produced in conjunction with the exhibition "An Archaeology of Silence," making its US debut at the de Young museum in March 2023.

"Kehinde Wiley: An Archaeology of Silence" is on view at the de Young until Saturday, October 14. The exhibition is included in general admission and is free every Saturday for Bay Area residents and on select weekends for all! Plan your visit today: www.famsf.org/exhibitions/kehinde-wiley-an-archaeo…

Watch more FAMSF Presents:    • FAMSF Presents  

Learn more:
Kehinde Wiley's Reclamation of Black Lives
www.famsf.org/stories/kehinde-wiley-reclamation-bl…
The Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco describe Kehinde Wiley: An Archaeology of Silence as “the senseless deaths of men and women around the world . . . transformed into a powerful elegy of resistance.” This exhibition showcases Wiley’s work under the shadow of the COVID-19 pandemic, the murder of George Floyd, and the resulting Black Lives Matter movement — arguably the largest movement in the country’s history.

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Born in Cape Town, South Africa, contemporary artist Lhola Amira responds to the wounds left by colonization across many disparate contexts to create spaces for healing through connection to the earth, the ancestral, and the spiritual.

All Comments (21)
  • @FAMSF
    Kehinde Wiley: An Archaeology of Silence is on view at the de Young from March 18 - October 15, 2023. The exhibition is included in general admission and is free every Saturday for Bay Area residents and on select weekends for all! Plan your visit today: www.famsf.org/exhibitions/kehinde-wiley-an-archaeo…
  • When Kehinde Wiley was an artist in residence at the Studio Museum in Harlem that was my introduction to his work and an opportunity to speak with him. His work spoke to me in ways I could not eloquently verbally express at the time. I told him that he was going to be very famous one day. He just stared at me with a blank stare. I wasn't too sure if he heard me. His silence made me wonder if had a vision for himself. I believe he did and it was destined for him to escalate to this level. Thanks for sharing this film. This is a wonderful addition to another film about him which is called, "An Economy of Grace."
  • @nlbhaduri
    I am an artist, a woman, a mixed race Indian, and was born in Ghana… the moment I saw one of Kehinde’s paintings in New Orleans I think he changed my life….in how to have courage to be myself and to let my story be valid with the stories of everyone else around me. His work is beyond monumental. It is life changing.
  • @twittertwice
    In the 90s, I was at the home of friends who lived San Francisco’s Haight Ashbury for dinner… around 1Opm, I was preparing to leave, a family friend, younger than the three of us old adults, came from another part of the house where he had been hanging out with the couples daughter. He was coming to say goodbye and was headed for home. They introduced us as we were all standing at the top of the stairs of their house that began on the second floor. I asked the young man, who reminded of my younger brother, which way he was headed because if he were going in my direction I would give him a ride home . That is the moment I met Kehinde Wiley. We went down and got in my Black Saab. He lived on Hayes Street near Octavia. The area was changing, but could still be a dangerous area at night. It did not take us long to arrive in front of his place. It looked like a possibly abandon bldg. He had begun to tell me who he was, The wunderkind, (my word, not his) who had recently graduated from the SF Art Institute. I began to pull his name out of the recesses of my brain. I worked in the city and was involved with a lot of art institutions, mostly museums, theatre, dance, symphony and ballet. I remember hearing about this young Black man at the Art Institute blowing people away. I was busy working as an exofficio member of the board of directors monitoring the planning of Yerba Buena Center/ Gardens. He was talkative and we sat in my car talking for at least an hour. He was leaving for NYC the next morning and I got the feeling he just wanted closeness for the moment. We talked about his mother and brother and how they meant to him. He spoke about the elite quality of the SF Institute, but as a Black student he was poor outside his art life at the Institute. How sometimes life had been tough. We talked about the Studio Museum. I do not remember him mentioning Yale, but that may be because I had read so much about Thelma Golden, who headed up the Studio Museum. I was focused on him being in the internship program at the Studio museum.. It was getting very late. He said, he was sorry he was all packed or he would give me one of his drawings. I hushed him and told him , he didnt owe me any thing for the ride. I said in the car and watched him disappear into a building that did not appear to be habitable. He turned and waved as he shut a door and I drove off. Years later, I opened the Sunday New York times to see an article about, artist, Kehinde Wiley Exhibition at the Jewish Museum in NYC and my mouth fell open
  • Five minutes with this man would no doubt make me smarter. I must know more!
  • @ericcoyle3520
    And people have been saying things like "painting is dead" for years . WELL< LOOK AT THIS PEOPLE! A painter who is doing amazing work and I have never heard of him before. Eyes opened.
  • I'm an artist and art historian, and Kehinde Wiley is already a giant in the art world. He and many other Black contemporary artists like Yinka Shonibare, Kara Walker, Adrian Piper, Titus Kaphar, etc. have truly shaped my way of thinking of/about art. Great video!
  • What a remarkable, thoughtful and powerful artist, I am in awe.
  • @michaelcbyers
    Mickalene Thomas said it best. "Kehinde Wiley has mastered master paintings." Couldn't agree more. This is so inspiring.
  • The paintings and sculptures in person are magnificent! So fortunate to have the show in San Francisco.
  • ...the black male in the mugshot was beautiful...and Kehinde's painting of him was spectacular...✊🏿...♥️...❤...
  • @popswerks7915
    This artist stands out and transcends our American culture.
  • @stevenconn630
    What a thoughtful man and an immense talent! A modern master.Thank you for featuring him,I really loved everything about it and him.
  • I am so excited to see this exhibit. And terrified because I know my emotions will overflow.
  • @ART_INDIA
    Unique Art 🎨 and Very meaning full Work....🙏🙏🙏💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐💐
  • @PatsyC57
    Breathtaking, like mountains, soft as if caressing his subjects, and the colors he uses to give life and strength to his subjects are out of these world.
  • I got the privilege to actually see a real kehinde Wiley painting in person, and it was breathtaking