Skip to main content

Search

Donate

Home Smithsonian Institution

Site Navigation

  • Visit
    • Museums and Zoo
    • Timed-Entry Passes
    • Tips & Guidelines
    • Accessibility
  • What's On
    • Exhibitions
      • Current Exhibitions
      • Upcoming
      • Past Exhibitions
      • Online Exhibitions
    • Today's Events
    • Online Events
    • All Events
    • IMAX Films
  • Explore & Learn
    • Explore Interests
      • Art & Design
      • History & Culture
      • Science & Nature
      • Blogs
      • Mobile Apps
      • Podcasts
    • Collections
      • Open Access
      • Smithsonian Snapshot
    • For Educators
      • Resources
      • Field Trips
      • Events
      • Professional Development
    • For Kids and Teens
    • Youth Programs
    • For Researchers
      • Libraries
      • Archives
        • Smithsonian Institution Archives
        • Air and Space Museum
        • Anacostia Community Museum
        • American Art Museum
        • Archives of American Art
        • Archives of American Gardens
        • American History Museum
        • American Indian Museum
        • Eliot Elisofon Photographic Archives, African Art
        • Freer|Sackler Archives
        • Hirshhorn Archive
        • National Anthropological Archives
        • National Portrait Gallery
        • Ralph Rinzler Archives, Folklife
        • Libraries and Special Collections
  • Get Involved
    • Volunteer
      • Behind-the-Scenes
      • Citizen Science
      • Digital Volunteers
      • Smithsonian Call Center
      • Visitor Information Specialist
      • Docent Programs
    • Fellowships & Internships
    • Work with Us
      • Human Resources
        • Working Here
        • Employee Benefits
        • Job Opportunities
        • How to Apply
        • Job Seekers with Disabilities
        • Frequently Asked Questions
        • Contact Us
      • Affiliations
      • Global Partners
  • Support
    • Become a Member
    • Renew Your Membership
    • Give Monthly
  • About
    • Museums and Zoo
    • Research Centers
    • Cultural Centers
    • Education
    • Our Leadership
      • Secretary Bunch
      • Assistant Secretary for Advancement
      • Assistant Secretary for Communications and External Affairs
      • Under Secretary for Administration
      • Under Secretary for Education
      • Under Secretary for Museums and Culture
      • Under Secretary for Science and Research
    • Our Organization
      • Board of Regents
        • Members
        • Committees
        • Reading Room
        • Bylaws, Policies and Procedures
        • Contact
        • Schedules and Agendas
        • Meeting Minutes
        • Actions
        • Webcasts
      • Inspector General
        • About the OIG
        • Contact OIG
        • Office of Audits
        • Office of Investigations
        • Reports and Other Publications
        • Report Waste, Fraud, Abuse
      • General Counsel
        • Legal History
        • Internships
        • Records Requests
          • Records Request Reading Room
        • Tort Claim
        • Subpoenas & Testimonies
        • Events
      • Equal Employment Office
        • EEO Complaint Process
        • Individuals with Disabilities
        • Special Emphasis Program
        • Supplier Diversity Program
          • Doing Business with Us
          • Policies and Procedures
          • Additional Resources
          • Goals and Accomplishments
    • Reports and Plans
      • Annual Reports
      • Metrics Dashboard
        • Dashboard Home
        • Virtual Smithsonian
        • Public Engagement
        • National Collections
        • Research
        • People & Operations
        • One Smithsonian
      • Strategic Plan
    • Newsdesk
      • News Releases
      • Media Contacts
      • Photos and Video
      • Media Kits
      • Fact Sheets
      • Visitor Stats
      • Secretary and Admin Bios
      • Filming Requests

Womanology 12

National Museum of African Art

Addthis Share Tools

    • Print

Object Details

Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, born 1977, England
Label Text
In an era in which painting has been decried as “dead,” Lynette Yiadom-Boakye has embraced painting: understanding color, surface, composition, and economy of line. Her work is about the craft of her medium. She works in oil for its natural and sensuous qualities, and its quality of gradation from dark to light. A day in her studio might begin with such questions as how to create a harmonious composition using green or how to successfully depict a three-quarter figure. Each of her paintings is made in a day in order to maintain their sense of urgency and to prevent furthering any mistakes. She is motivated by under-painting, glazing, pigment, composition, and failure. She would rather move on than exacerbate a problem by struggling with a painting.
Yiadom-Boakye does not consider her luminous large scale paintings or etchings to be portraiture. The characters that inhabit her work are based on neither acquaintances nor models. Her process includes cutting and pasting images according to such categories as views of backs, full-length figures, and seated figures. As the artist says, “By isolating things, they lose their original context... but I can think about the composition of a painting, for instance, how to position a hand correctly, how a leg stands when it’s got all the weight on one side of it. So I construct the painting from all of these things.” (Interview with Naomi Beckwith, August 16 2013: 112.) And while her work is not motivated by politics, by populating her canvases with characters of color, Yiadom-Boakye normalizes the representation of dark skinned individuals. Her subjects are not engaged in acts of servitude or violence, neither are they white and privileged, nor green and de-racialized. These figures appear to be individuals with whom viewers can identify and in whom we can believe. They walk, dance, stare into the distance, cast their eyes down in thought, or turn a flirtatious gaze out from the canvas.
Yiadom-Boakye’s figures are numerous and timeless. There is no furniture, structure or fashion that casts these figures outside of the time of their viewer, minimizing any sense of distance from them. The growing numbers of men, women and children who occupy her canvases seem ineffably present. In 2006, Yiadom-Boakye said of her characters that, “Although they are not real, I think of them as people known to me. They are imbued with a power of their own. They have a resonance – something empathetic and otherworldly. I admire them for the strength of their moral fiber. If they are pathetic, they don’t survive – if I feel sorry for someone, I get rid of them. I don’t like to paint victims.” (Kim 2008: 103.)
After their completion, Yiadom-Boakye pairs her paintings with evocative titles that may refer to a place, day, or literary fragment. Her titles seem to heighten the tension between the reality and fiction of her characters. Donatien Grau has written of this complex tension that it “paves the way toward a conception of art based on the certainty brought by the awareness of uncertainty; the freedom brought by the experience of restraint; the sense of meaning resulting from the parallel sensed of meaninglessness” (2014: 43). Womanology 12 seems to imply that there might be a Womanology 1-11, scenes that we may still have the opportunity to encounter. Yet Yiadom- Boakye has dropped us into the middle of a story for which we must imagine the past and future. In this canvas, a confident woman in a scarlet dress and matching hat emerges from a swirling backdrop of blue and black. She holds in her hands a pair of binoculars as she looks purposefully off into the distance unaware or uncaring that someone may be looking at her.
Description
Oil painting depicting the upper body of a woman in red dress and white hat with red ribbon looking through binoculars off to her left, surrounded by and abstract background of blue and black brushstrokes.
Exhibition History
Visionary: Viewpoints on Africa's Arts, National Museum of African Art, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C., November 4, 2017-ongoing
Lynette Yiadom-Boakye, The Love Within, Jack Shainman Gallery, New York, NY, November 21, 2014 - January 10, 2015
Credit Line
Museum purchase
2014
Object number
2015-5-1
Restrictions & Rights
Usage conditions apply
Copyright
(c) 2014 Lynette Yiadom Boakye
Type
Painting
Medium
Oil on canvas
Dimensions
Image: 180.3 × 160 cm (71 × 63 in.) Framed: 184.8 × 164.3 × 5.7 cm (72 3/4 × 64 11/16 × 2 1/4 in.)
Geography
Ghana
See more items in
National Museum of African Art Collection
Exhibition
Visionary: Viewpoints on Africa's Arts
On View
NMAfA, Second Level Gallery (2193)
National Museum of African Art
Topic
female
Record ID
nmafa_2015-5-1
Usage of Metadata (Object Detail Text)
Usage conditions apply
GUID (Link to Original Record)
http://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ys7e94bcfe0-c33f-40d4-b007-ca2271495ef9
There are restrictions for re-using this image. For more information, visit the Smithsonian's Terms of Use page .
International media Interoperability Framework
IIIF provides researchers rich metadata and media viewing options for comparison of works across cultural heritage collections. Visit the IIIF page to learn more.
View manifest View in Mirador Viewer

Footer logo

Link to homepage

Footer navigation

  • Contact Us
  • Press Room
  • Employment
  • Host Your Event
  • Access Smithsonian
  • EEO & Supplier Diversity
  • Inspector General
  • Records Requests
  • Privacy
  • Terms of Use

Social media links

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
  • Tumblr
  • Twitter
  • YouTube

Email signup form

Email powered by BlackBaud (Privacy Policy, Terms of Use)
Back to Top