I am not sure that any art exhibit has taken my breath away quite like the exhibit of Black American Portraits at LACMA in 2022. Like most of the crowd, I had gone to see the already-iconic Obama portraits by artist Kehinde Wiley—that alone was well-worth the wait. But beyond those two spectacular portraits were over 150 other pieces of art, featuring 200 years of Black American subjects, sitters, and spaces. The goal was, according to LACMA’s publicity, “centering Black love, abundance, family, community, and exuberance.” Among them were a number, that I recall, portraying ordinary Black Americans as royalty—a common theme in Kehinde Wiley’s work.
So, imagine my surprise to discover that in 2012—long before the Obama portraits—the Jewish Museum in New York mounted a Kehinde Wiley exhibit for Black History month entitled Kehinde Wiley/The World Stage: Israel. The description of the exhibit offers the following:
I wish I had seen this exhibit, and would love to have heard Wiley’s reflections on that particular project, as the complexities of Israeli society and ethnicity are both endlessly fascinating and challenging.
But more than that, I also love Wiley’s own description of his work, which appears on his website. He writes that his portraits challenge and reorient art-historical narratives, awakening complex issues that many would prefer remain muted. While Wiley is certainly not Jewish—nor is his art—that goal resonates so deeply with me, as a student of Jewish history and especially text. What is our religious interpretive tradition if not one of challenging and reorienting historical narratives, of confronting complex issues, and giving voice to that which might be easier to keep muted?
— Rabbi Sari Laufer