Laylah Ali in "Power" - Season 3 - "Art in the Twenty-First Century" | Art21

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  • Опубликовано: 25 авг 2024
  • Art21 proudly presents an artist segment, featuring Laylah Ali, from the "Power" episode in Season 3 of the "Art in the Twenty-First Century" series.
    "Power" premiered in September 2005 on PBS.
    Working in extremely detailed paintings that take months to create, Laylah Ali combines cartoon and folkloric aesthetics to explore notions of ethnicity and social violence. In her studio, Ali demonstrates the tricky process of working with gouache on paper and speculates that the physiological effects of color and light on the eye may have real social effects.
    Laylah Ali was born in Buffalo, New York, in 1968, and lives and works in Williamstown, Massachusetts. Learn more about the artist at: art21.org/arti...
    CREDITS
    Created by: Susan Sollins & Susan Dowling. Executive Producer & Curator: Susan Sollins. Series Producer: Eve-Laure Moros Ortega. Associate Producer: Migs Wright. Assistant Curator: Wesley Miller. Production Manager: Alice Bertoni. Production Coordinator: Kelly Shindler. Producer: Catherine Tatge. Editor: Steven Wechsler. Host: David Alan Grier. Director of Photography: Takahisa Araki, Richard Chisolm, Mark Falstad, Gary Henoch, Samuel Henriques, Mead Hunt, Tom Hurwitz, Joel Shapiro, David Smith, Ken Willinger, & Sérgio Zeigler. Sound: Tom Bergin, Steve Bores, Dwayne Dell, Bob Freeman, Roger Phenix, Merce Williams, & Sérgio Zeigler. Assistant Camera: Chris DeGuy, Craig Feldman, Brian Hwang, Steve Nealey, & Matt Thurber. Production Assistant: Matt Cavanaugh & Justin Leitstein. Assistant Avid Editor: Robert Achs, Jamie Courville, Sean Frechette, Mike Heffron, David Kreger, Cara Leroy O’Connell, Joaquin Perez, Aaron Sheddrick, & Lynn True. Voice-Over Artist (Cai Guo-Qiang segment): Clem Cheung. Translator (Cai Guo-Qiang segment): Ai Guo, Louisa Lam, & Mingxia Li. Still Photography: Alice Bertoni.
    Major underwriting for Season 3 of Art in the Twenty-First Century is provided by National Endowment for the Arts, PBS, Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro, Nathan Cummings Foundation, Corporation for Public Broadcasting, Jon and Mary Shirley Foundation, Bagley Wright Fund Bloomberg, The Horace W. Goldsmith Foundation, JPMorgan Chase, Melva Bucksbaum and Raymond Learsy, The Paul G. Allen Family Foundation, and The Andy Warhol Foundation for the Visual Arts.
    Full credits available at art21.org/watc...
    #LaylahAli #Power #Art21

Комментарии • 10

  • @joelharris4399
    @joelharris4399 Месяц назад +7

    A recently discovered 51, 000 year-old cave art in Indonesia highlights the startling truth that from our earliest emergence anatomical modern humans have been creating stories to understand our world, our place in it and each other. Storytelling is what separates humans from the other living species. Laylah Ali's art is creative individual expression plucked out the body as vessel, as art was always intended to be, not an escapist fantasy 🧐

  • @MR-tn5kv
    @MR-tn5kv 10 дней назад

    I was introduced to her art decades ago by some friends. Her images always stayed with me, I am still, to the day, struck by how simple, yet not simple at all, but constructed, thoughtful & profound her art is. ❤
    and dodgeball!! I was usually the only brown person in my school & I would Always win at dodgeball - nobody could get me. For me it was exhilarating!

  • @timihobbs1992
    @timihobbs1992 Месяц назад +1

    Laylah Ali, Your art is wonderful, thanks. Beautiful and moving. I love Guash and paper too.

  • @JenC246
    @JenC246 23 дня назад

    I really enjoyed hearing about her thought process. Truly fascinating.

  • @barbh1
    @barbh1 Месяц назад +2

    I was a school child in the late 1950's. Dodge ball was just one of the ball games we'd play at recess. Nobody tried to hurt anyone. It was a fun game where you just tried to get out of the way.

    • @fabrice14637
      @fabrice14637 Месяц назад +2

      Well, in the upper midwest we used to call dodgeball "Murderball"---so extrapolate from that what you will.

    • @mariannemcginnis7274
      @mariannemcginnis7274 Месяц назад +4

      I was a schoolchild in the 1970s . Just seeing the dark red brown balls in Layla’s work was enough to remind me what dodgeball was like. Getting stung right in the face!? Painful and humiliating! If it was fun I don’t remember those times!

    • @mariannemcginnis7274
      @mariannemcginnis7274 Месяц назад +1

      I think this is the first time I’ve seen the commingling of dance and the visual arts that didn’t make me roll my eyes! This was exciting and weird and seemed so natural. Really cool. I’d love to see more. I wonder what the project is going to become?

  • @chantalrochon3566
    @chantalrochon3566 Месяц назад +2

    Captivating artist, loved every word and image❤😊❤

  • @JohnAranita
    @JohnAranita Месяц назад

    I think I shall watch the DVD ART IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY season nine later today.