The Potential of Ancestral Memory to Reconcile Personal and Racial Histories

Hyperallergic
October 26, 2018

Steve Locke’s racial imaginings uncover the quiet nuances of American history since chattel slavery. The deeply embedded traumas of enslavement, Jim Crow, and contemporary police brutality exist in a blended genealogy, each one successively descended from the other. Each generation is a landmark in American history, a forbearer acting upon its progeny to make it morph into newly imagined articulations of race and power that maintain the lineage of violent domination.

In the exhibition Family Pictures, at Yours Mine & Ours gallery Locke aestheticizes the entanglement of personal, familial, and racial histories which sits upon the mantel of every Black American ho­­me, and inconspicuously seeps into domestic realities. He also places infamous images of racial violence — lynchings, slave ships, and brutal torture — inside kitschy picture frames boasting clichéd phrases like “Memories” and “always & forever.”

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