My Strength Lies

Wangechi Mutu Kenyan-American

Not on view

My Strength Lies is a monumental diptych composed of two mixed media collages that each stand just over eight feet tall. Across these collages, Mutu stages a complex encounter between two deformed, fragmented figures. One figure is humanoid in appearance and bears attributes that identify her as female. She stands upright, towering over the viewer, while holding the bottom of her right leg. The other figure is more creature than human--indeed, it is barely human at all, only an incomplete pile of limbs that lays prone atop a bulging landscape. Each figure is built out of pools of ink, sequins, and scraps of collage material, mostly fragments of magazine images depicting both organic and industrial objects, from eyes and lips to car engines and motorcycles. Upon close viewing, the figures dissolve into glorious, acqueous abstractions. Mutu's two mechanomorphic hybrids are set within a post-apocalyptic, perhaps even extra-terrestrial backdrop. Possible stories proliferate, but the general thrust is clear: we are witnessing the aftermath of a violent struggle, possibly an act of genocide, colonial incursion, or alien invasion. Mutu's narrative and setting might be bleak, but signs of hope and optimism are nonetheless present. Take, for instance, the intact, self-possessed Black woman who stands astride the defeated figure, seeming to repair a wooden structure that extends outward in both directions. She represents the strength—both inner psychological courage and raw, physical power—referenced in the title.

My Strength Lies, Wangechi Mutu (Kenyan-American, born Nairobi, 1972), Ink, acrylic, photomechanically printed cut and pasted paper, contact paper, metallic sequin and glitter on two mylar sheets

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