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Request to view at the Prints & Drawings Study Room, room 514a , Case SH, Shelf 45

Looking High and Low

Wallpaper
1993 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Carrie Mae Weems is best known as a photographer, but she has also made other works. One example is the decorated screen for the installation The Apple of Adam's Eye at the Philadelphia Fabric Workshop and Museum in 1993. This wallpaper was part of the same installation. Rather unusually, Weems appropriated a design by the British artist John Farleigh that was made for the endpapers to a book by George Bernard Shaw. The book, The Adventures of The Black Girl in her Search for God, was published in 1932. Weems chose the design as a backdrop to a display of her own photographs. These were in fact taken on a 'pilgrimage' that she made to the Coast of Ghana, Elmina, the Cape Coast and the Ile de Gorée in 1991. As she put it in an interview with curator Thomas Collins, 'I was a subject in search of myself and attempting to map a new psychological terrain for myself and others. I suppose . . . I'm trying to construct a new prism for looking at certain aspects of African-American culture. The wallpaper is a metaphor for the searching, probing, looking'.


Object details

Categories
Object type
TitleLooking High and Low (assigned by artist)
Materials and techniques
Screenprint on paper
Brief description
'Looking High and Low'. Roll of wallpaper 'African Series' by Carrie Mae Weens, 1995. Screenprint.
Physical description
roll of wallpaper, repeat- patterned in black and white with stylised image of back of a girl (waist length), leaning forward, flanked by a large fern and a bundle of leafy stems. The pattern in fact is a reproduction of the endpaper designed by John Farleigh for the 1932 publication ' The Adventures of The Black Girl in her Search for God', by George Bernard Shaw.
Dimensions
  • Approx. length: 994.5cm
  • Width: 67.5cm
Credit line
Given by the artist
Production
The paper was created as a backdrop for display of three series of photographs of Ghana, Elmina, the Cape Coast and the Isle de Gorée, Senegal, taken by the artist in 1991. The series are known as the "Africa", "Slave Coast", and "Landed in Africa" series
Subjects depicted
Place depicted
Literary referenceGeorge Bernard Shaw:"The Adventures of The Black Girl in Her Search for God". 1932.
Summary
Carrie Mae Weems is best known as a photographer, but she has also made other works. One example is the decorated screen for the installation The Apple of Adam's Eye at the Philadelphia Fabric Workshop and Museum in 1993. This wallpaper was part of the same installation. Rather unusually, Weems appropriated a design by the British artist John Farleigh that was made for the endpapers to a book by George Bernard Shaw. The book, The Adventures of The Black Girl in her Search for God, was published in 1932. Weems chose the design as a backdrop to a display of her own photographs. These were in fact taken on a 'pilgrimage' that she made to the Coast of Ghana, Elmina, the Cape Coast and the Ile de Gorée in 1991. As she put it in an interview with curator Thomas Collins, 'I was a subject in search of myself and attempting to map a new psychological terrain for myself and others. I suppose . . . I'm trying to construct a new prism for looking at certain aspects of African-American culture. The wallpaper is a metaphor for the searching, probing, looking'.
Bibliographic reference
Carrie Mae Weems, Mary Jane Jacob, bell hooks: "Carrie Mae Weems:The Fabric Workshop/Museum, Philadelphia" The Fabric Workshop/Museum Philadelphia, 1993 Thomas Collins and Carrie Mae Weems: leaflet to accompany the display 'Projects' Museum of Modern Art, New York. November 1995- January 1996.
Collection
Accession number
E.262-2000

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Record createdFebruary 15, 2001
Record URL
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