‘Nari Ward: Home of the Brave’ on View at the Vilcek Foundation

New York City (via Newswire.com) — The Vilcek Foundation is pleased to present “Nari Ward: Home of the Brave,” Ward’s first solo exhibition with the foundation. The exhibition, curated by Vilcek Foundation President Rick Kinsel, will be on view from May 31, 2022, to Feb. 3, 2023.

Nari Ward: Home of the Brave includes a selection of works and installations by the Jamaican-born artist. The exhibition provokes an examination of the values espoused in iconic American symbols, including the American flag and the Statue of Liberty. The individual works invite viewers to question how the concepts of democracy, liberty, and belonging are experienced by immigrants, Black people, and other underrepresented communities whose experiences put them outside the dominant narrative.

Ward was born in Jamaica and immigrated to the United States with his family at the age of 12; the family settled in Brooklyn, New York. Ward has lived in the New York City area ever since, earning his B.A. at Hunter College and his MFA at Brooklyn College.

Ward became a U.S. citizen in 2011. He received the Vilcek Prize in Fine Arts in 2017 for his body of found-object assemblage artwork that invites both public discourse and intimate dialogue on topics including race, poverty, and Black and Caribbean diasporic identities.

“As a curator,” Kinsel says, “it is especially exciting to be able to provide a platform for Ward’s work. Ward challenges viewers to consider the conflicting attitudes towards immigration in the United States. In the past several decades we have seen a rise in anti-immigration sentiment across our country. National symbols like the American flag and the Declaration of Independence hold multiple meanings for historically under-represented groups, and Ward’s work conveys the dualities within. “The American flag can both be seen as the triumphant banner that waves ‘O’er the land of the free/And the home of the brave’ in our national anthem, and the banner that was carried by extremists that stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.”

The information cited in this story was included in a press release from Newswire.com. The release was sent to CapitolBeatOK.com, which adapted the release. Newswire is a press release distribution platform that regularly works with news organizations around the world. The original press release can be read here: https://www.newswire.com/news/nari-ward-home-of-the-brave-on-view-at-the-vilcek-foundation-21709835

Symbols are powerful both as they were intended, and as they are appropriated, the Vilcek narrative continued. In the words of the press release sent to CapitolBeatOK., “The power of Ward’s work lies in part in his appropriation of everyday objects. Using shoelaces, discarded tires, and washing machine drums, he constructs works that are monumental for the concepts they address. Each of these works invites viewers to examine their own relationship to race, economics, power, and belonging in the United States.”

Art historian and curator Erica Moiah James contributed the exhibition essay for “Nari Ward: Home of the Brave.”An assistant professor of African, Black, and Caribbean art at the University of Miami, James previously wrote on Ward’s work for “Nari Ward: Sun Splashed“; in that volume, she contextualized Ward’s work within the Caribbean diaspora, noting “complex relations and subject reformation at the heart of Caribbean modernities are mechanisms that are fundamental to the artist’s thinking, formal vocabulary, and aesthetic production.”

In conjunction with the exhibition, the Vilcek Foundation produced a video with Ward highlighting the installation of Lazarus (2019) at the foundation. https://vilcek.org/art/lazarus/

In the one-and-a-half-minute video, Ward discusses the intent of the work, which uses thousands of shoelaces inserted into the gallery’s walls to frame selected words from Emma Lazarus’ poem, The New Colossus. In the video, Ward discusses how the process of installation is a vital part of how this meaning is conveyed and experienced: “When I was working with the laces, it was really important that they be in the wall; that it was part of the architecture…. [Y]our relationship to the work within the space has something to do with how legible the work itself is.”

“Nari Ward: Home of the Brave” is open to the public in the Vilcek Foundation’s headquarters at 21 East 70th Street in New York City by appointment. Appointments may be made by emailing the Vilcek Foundation’s art department at exhibitions@vilcek.org. Learn more and plan your visit via the Vilcek Foundation website, at the following link: Nari Ward: Home of the Brave https://vilcek.org/events/nari-ward-home-of-the-brave/?utm_source=newswire&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=ward.brave&utm_content=news Following the exhibition at the Vilcek Foundation, ‘Nari Ward: Home of the Brave’ will be available for loan and display at other institutions.

Vilcek Foundation Curator Emily Schuchardt Navratil said in the press release sent to CapitolBeatOK.com, “With this capsule exhibition, we hope to be able to share Ward’s work and the mission and vision of the Vilcek Foundation with a wider audience.”She says, “The initiative to develop exhibitions available for loan has grown out of our mission to foster appreciation for the arts, and our commitment to making the works included in the Vilcek Collection accessible to the public.”

Learn more and consider a visit today: “Nari Ward: Home of the Brave at the Vilcek Foundationhttps://vilcek.org/events/nari-ward-home-of-the-brave/?utm_source=newswire&utm_medium=cpc&utm_campaign=ward.brave&utm_content=news

About the Foundation: The Vilcek Foundation is a private operating foundation, a federally tax-exempt nonprofit organization under IRS Section 501(c)(3). To learn more, please visit vilcek.org. The foundation’s communications manager is Elizabeth Boylan, (212) 472-2500, elizabeth.boylan@vilcek.org. The Vilcek Foundation raises awareness of immigrant contributions in the United States and fosters appreciation for the arts and sciences. The foundation was established in 2000 by Jan and Marica Vilcek, immigrants from the former Czechoslovakia. The mission of the foundation was inspired by the couple’s respective careers in biomedical science and art history. Since 2000, the foundation has awarded over $6.4 million in prizes to foreign-born individuals and has supported organizations with over $5.5 million in grants.