Meleko Mokgosi at the Fowler
UCLA-trained and now a New Yorker, Mokgosi works on unprimed canvas, creating a illusionistic Botswana dissolving at the fringes into gestural abstraction.
Most panels are based on snapshots, news photos, or school photos. Many have still-life elements and allusions to art history. A boy in a wicker chair parodies Blair Stapp's photo of Black Panther co-founder Eldridge Cleaver (an image that is also appropriated in the Marvel Studios Black Panther). We're not in Oakland, or Wakanda, anymore.
Below, a superflat panel incorporates Harriet Tubman (upper left); UCLA Black Panther Angela Davis, in her Samuel Fosso portrait (middle right); two amorous ladies; a Victorian marble bust said to be Mary Seacole, Jamaica's Florence Nightingale (and now at the Getty); plus a poster you can pick up for free at the Fowler bookstore.
Mokgosi was the first winner of the Mohn Prize. Bread, Butter, and Power ought to reassure this year's winner that there's no Heisman curse to the Mohn.
Comments
The single Chuck Close painting at the Broad seems to be one of its more popular pieces. A Mokgosi there would probably grab a similar level of interest from visitors.