Exhibitions

BEVERLY BUCHANAN: I BROKE THE HOUSE

The Carl Van Vechten Gallery (Fisk University) / 1000 17th Ave. N. September 25, 2024 - March 31, 2025

Beverly Buchanan

Join us for the opening of Beverly Buchanan: I Broke the House at the Carl Van Vechten Art Gallery on September 25th at 4-7PM. This exhibition, which originated at ETH Zurich, offers a comprehensive exploration of Beverly Buchanan's (1940–2015) diverse body of work, featuring sculpture, painting, photography, drawing, writing, and printed material.

I Broke the House brings together a wide range of contemporary voices, artworks, and historical contexts. It critically engages with Buchanan's exploration of the built environment, addressing themes of race, memory, and resistance. The exhibition emphasizes Buchanan’s ability to challenge traditional exhibition practices by reimagining the spaces that hold her work. Through her focus on eroded surfaces, vernacular dwellings, and marginalized histories, Buchanan provides a poignant commentary on the sociopolitical landscape of her time.

Curated in collaboration with GTA exhibitions at ETH Zurich, the Engine for Art, Democracy, and Justice (EADJ), and Fisk University, this exhibition project builds on the earlier presentation at ETH Zurich in the spring of 2024. That iteration of I Broke the House involved contributions from a range of artists and scholars, including Elena Bally, Jennifer Burris, María Magdalena Campos-Pons, Aria Dean, Fredi Fischli, Jack Halberstam, Harvard University GSD students, Alicia Henry, Anna Gritz, Tonja Khabir, Parity Group, Prudence Lopp, Park McArthur, Devin T. Mays, Ana Mendieta, Siddhartha Mitter, Kazuko Miyamoto, Senga Nengudi, Niels Olsen, Sarah Richter, Cameron Rowland, Jamaal Sheats, Adam Szymczyk, and the Tubman African American Museum in Macon.

This collaborative project is an exploratory exercise, as Siddhartha Mitter describes it, in "thinking with" Beverly Buchanan's practice and legacy. The presentation at Fisk includes objects from the permanent collection and archive. As part of this ongoing project, Haus am Waldsee in Berlin will also host a future exhibition inspired by Buchanan’s work, continuing the dialogue around her impact on contemporary art, particularly her connection to the American South.