Betye Saar's 'The Liberation Of Aunt Jemima'

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Artistic Interventions: Challenging Dominant Narratives in Postwar Society Postwar art exemplified by the Collective Actions Group’s “Ten Appearances” (1981), Betye Saar’s “The Liberation of Aunt Jemima” (1972), and Cindy Sherman’s “Untitled Film Stills” (1977-1980) actively intervened in their specific socio-political contexts by deploying formal strategies that challenged dominant narratives, reclaimed marginalized identities, and asserted individual agency within oppressive systems Through their work, these artists demonstrated a profound understanding of the political dynamics of their time and employed various tactics to achieve their political aspirations. In the Soviet Union, the official state art style remained strictly Socialist Realist …show more content…

Saar’s oeuvre is underpinned by a profound belief in the transformative potential of recording and revolutionizing historical narratives. In The Liberation of Aunt Jemima, Saar grapples with the pernicious legacy of racial stereotypes, exemplified by the mammy figure Aunt Jemima. Saar revitalizes and recontextualizes these iconography and provides them with a newfound sense of agency as well as defiance. The assemblage serves as a poignant commentary on the ways in which forms, modes of representation, and the broader image economy contribute to the construction of individual and collective identities. Saar’s utilization of the mammy figure speaks to a process of sensitization, wherein she confronts the pervasive presence of derogatory imagery and seeks to reclaim it as a site of empowerment and resistance (Godfrey, 181). Through the repetition of figures, Saar confronts viewers with historically oppressive imagery, urging viewers to acknowledge the enduring legacies of racism. Saar’s assemblages decry racism and amplify the voices of marginalized communities by asserting her own self-determination and

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