
“Looking Back,” illustration to Voice of Freedom, 2014, Collage of found and painted papers and fabric. Collection of the artist; ©Ekua Holmes

“Matter of Time,” 2006; Collage of found and painted papers; © Ekua Holmes; Courtesy Boston Children’s Hospital

“Chain of Courage,” 2015; Collage of found and painted papers, ©Ekua Holmes, Collection of the artist
Life revealed in layers
On its first day last
Friday, “Paper Stories, Layered Dreams: The Art of Ekua Holmes,” a new
show at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston (MFA), was already full of
visitors.
Organized by
Meghan Melvin, the MFA’a curator of design, the exhibition presents
about 40 works created over the past decade by Ekua Holmes. On view
through January 23, the show features free-standing artworks by Holmes, a
lifelong Roxbury resident, as well as her award-winning children’s book
illustrations.
Commissioner
and vice chair of the Boston Art Commission and associate director of
MassArt’s Center for Art and Community Partnerships, Holmes, 66,
attended the Elma Lewis School of Fine Arts, took studio classes at the
MFA and in 1977 received a BFA in Photography from MassArt.
The
first of two galleries features studio art produced between 2010-2014
and her first major illustration project, the children’s book “Voice of
Freedom: Fannie Lou Hamer, Spirit of the Civil Rights Movement” (2015),
by Carole Boston Weatherford. The gallery also shows a five-minute video
interview with Holmes.
On
view in the adjacent gallery are her illustrations from other published
books, accompanied by wall texts written by participants in the MFA’s
teen curatorial program.
In
her illustrations for children’s books, Holmes portrays and celebrates
the daily life of Black families in urban and rural settings, rendering
scenes in a tropical palette.
Her
studio art presents closeups of individuals in whom she evokes traces
of the history of a family, a neighborhood and a people.
Holmes
often employs the bold forms and colors of Expressionism and the flat,
abstract shapes of African art. She fashions many images from collages, a
technique she has practiced since childhood. Collage suits the layering
of times
past and the present that deepen her work. Composed from fragments of
discarded paper, fabrics, newsprint and books, their translucent layers
of color and texture mimic the shimmering layers of memory, refracting
and reflecting patterns of light as well as images of events across
time.
We know the
people in her pictures, whom Holmes renders in their individuality while
also evoking the community and era of which they are a part.
In
the first gallery, “Looking Back” (2014), from “Voice of Freedom,”
portrays a mature woman in a minimalist, sculpted style. Her face exudes
enduring strength and her long gaze spans decades.
Nearby
are large portraits by Holmes of her grandfather and her aunt, whom as a
child she visited every summer in their hometown of Hope, Arkansas.
They are part of a series she entitled “Idyll of the South,” a nod to a
renowned mural by Aaron Douglas (1899-1979), “Idyll of the Deep South.”
Both portraits are framed by wooden shutters, conjuring homes and lives
left behind in the Great Migration. Accompanied by a shrine-like
installation assembled from keepsakes and evocative curios, each is both
an intimate rendering of a figure in a personal family album and a
tribute to a shared history of Black Americans.
“Idyll of the South: Root
of Jesse” (2012) is a closeup of her grandfather’s weathered, soulful
face, its skin fractured in pieces of newsprint as if to reflect
headlines and events of years past.
Below the portrait, a
bouquet of cotton bolls rests on a large, yellowed Bible open to Isaiah
11:1, “A shoot will come up from the stump of Jesse; from his roots a
Branch will bear fruit.”
A
small, delicate cameo of her aunt is shown alongside the grand
“Portrait of Aunt Mary” (2012), which shows a handsome woman reclining
on the grass in front of a barn. Below it, Holmes has placed a vintage
sewing table that displays a toy train and envelopes, items evoking the
journeys and separations of the Great Migration.
learn more
“Paper Stories, Layered Dreams: The Art of Ekua Holmes” On view through Jan. 23 at the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston mfa.org/exhibition/paper-stories-layered-dreams