Using light, sound and digital film projection, Flight explored the physical, architectural and cultural residue of the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre into the present. Timed with the 100-year commemoration of the massacre, Flight incorporated archival material with digital video, digitized 35-mm film footage, three-channel sound, and vinyl. The artist provided multiple points of entry and angles of refraction, offering an unfixed sense of what is varying parts history, impressions, analysis, and reverie.
ARTIST STATEMENT
Flight is a sonic and filmic experience, marking the centennial of one of Oklahoma’s greatest public secrets: the 1921 Tulsa Race Massacre. Gazing at this past through the lens of the present, Flight poetically hovers between metaphor, omission, fiction, rumor, and historical reality. Piloting this complex narrative is a riddle of impossibility.
Flight charts multiple points of departure:
Who learned to fly?
Who scoped the area?
Who looked out?
Who fled?
Who could not flee?
Who obstructed visibility?
Who engaged the ground?
In the space between fugitivity and stillness, I offer flight.
A, sometimes, quiet landing.
This exhibition was made possible by a grant from the Mid-America Arts Alliance.