Lorraine O’Grady, Artist Who Defied Category, Is Dead at 90

1 month ago 26

Arts|Lorraine O’Grady, Artist Who Defied Category, Is Dead at 90

https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/15/arts/lorraine-ogrady-dead.html

You have a preview view of this article while we are checking your access. When we have confirmed access, the full article content will load.

She worked in collage, photography, performance, video and installation, and she dealt forthrightly with the complexities of race and gender.

A portrait of Lorraine O'Grady wearing a black jacket and large rings on her fingers. Her hands placed under her chin.
The artist Lorraine O’Grady in 2021. She did not begin making art until she was in her 40s, but she went on to influence a generation of younger Black artists.Credit...Lelanie Foster for The New York Times

Holland Cotter

Dec. 15, 2024Updated 4:58 p.m. ET

Lorraine O’Grady, a conceptual artist who had careers as a research economist, literary translator and rock critic before producing her first art in her 40s, and who went on to influence a generation of younger Black artists, died on Friday at her home in Manhattan. She was 90.

Robert Ransick of the Lorraine O’Grady Trust confirmed the death.

Embracingly interdisciplinary in her formal choices, Ms. O’Grady had no fixed style. She worked in collage, photography, performance, video and installation. And she dealt forthrightly with the complicated realities of race and gender, drawing on her own experience of being excluded from the white art world because she was Black and marginalized within the Black art world because she was a woman. As a result, no one knew quite what to do with her, and her art career remained little known until recently.

The child of Lena and Edwin O’Grady, middle-class Jamaican immigrants who had, she said, “more education than they would be allowed to use in this country,“ Lorraine Eleanor O’Grady was born in Boston on Sept. 21, 1934, and grew up within a few blocks of the city’s main public library, where she spent much of her childhood reading and writing.

Image

In 1983, Ms. O’Grady created a participatory piece titled “Art Is …” in which performers descended into the street and invited spectators to pose for portrait photos within empty gilded frames.Credit...Lorraine O'Grady Courtesy Lorraine O'Grady Trust

She majored in economics and Spanish literature at Wellesley College and, after graduation, took a job in Washington as a research economist with the U.S. Department of Labor, focusing on labor conditions in Africa and Latin America.

But her path was a restless one. After a few years, she quit her government job and moved to Europe to write a novel. She returned to the U.S., where she studied at the University of Iowa Writers’ Workshop. For a while, to support herself, she taught high school Spanish. In 1970, she opened a commercial translation agency in Chicago that attracted clients ranging from the Encyclopaedia Britannica to Playboy magazine.


Thank you for your patience while we verify access. If you are in Reader mode please exit and log into your Times account, or subscribe for all of The Times.


Thank you for your patience while we verify access.

Already a subscriber? Log in.

Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

Read Entire Article
Olahraga Sehat| | | |