Interview: How Carrie Mae Weems Takes Up Space

In a book excerpt, the nation’s art stars discuss showing up and showing out

ZORA Editors
ZORA

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“A Single Waltz in Time.” Image: Carrie Mae Weems

Carrie Mae Weems is an artist for this generation. Her work exemplifies the Black experience and invites layers of contemplation and meaning. The conversation below is excerpted from the book Carrie Mae Weems, wherein various essays and interviews explore the work and cultural importance of the influential artist. This interview is among art stars Sarah Elizabeth Lewis, Carrie Mae Weems, and Thelma Golden.

“All those roads led to finally looking at the function of museums and who exists inside and outside of those spaces practically, culturally, historically, politically, and contemporarily. I think that has been really important for my work.” — Carrie Mae Weems on access and equity

Sarah Elizabeth Lewis: We are speaking about space broadly defined — institutions, museums, and the encounters that happen in these spaces. In retrospect, I see your interrogation of the construction of space as one of the main developments in your work. This is also what brings you both together as artist and curator. The…

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