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Heirlooms and Accessories
Heirlooms and Accessories
Heirlooms and Accessories

Heirlooms and Accessories

Maker (American, b. 1955)
Date2002
MediumInk-jet print on paper in wooden artist's frame with rhinestones
DimensionsEach: 51 x 46 in. (129.5 x 116.8 cm)
Framed: 57 x 53 x 3 in. (144.8 x 134.6 x 7.6 cm)
Credit LinePurchase, Smart Family Fund Foundation for Contemporary art, and Paul and Miriam Kirkley Fund for Acquisitions
Object number2004.12b
Object TypePhotographs
On View
Not on view

Kerry James Marshall based Heirlooms and Accessories on a famous journalistic photograph from 1930 that shows a white crowd watching the lynching of two black men in Marion, Indiana. Marshall digitally altered the photograph to make it very faint (a process called “ghosting”). He then added images of necklaces that highlight three women—“accessories” to the crime. They have turned away from the lynching to look at the photographer, whose place we in turn occupy as viewers. The eye contact we make with these individuals implicates us as bystanders to this bleak history.
Chicago-based Marshall first became known as a painter. Like many of his peers who move among media in search of the most effective means to express their ideas, Marshall now also works in sculpture, installation, video, and photo-based processes. Here, the idea of that this violent legacy serves as a twisted kind of heirloom or memento is heightened by Marshall’s use of the photographic medium, as well as his choice to add sparkling rhinestones to the jewel-box-like frames.

Kerry James Marshall: Heirlooms and Accessories from Smart Museum of Art on Vimeo.