The cultural politics of worldmaking practice: Kehinde Wiley's cosmopolitanism
The cultural politics of worldmaking practice: Kehinde Wiley's cosmopolitanism
ontemporary African-American artist Kehinde Wiley recasts Old Master paintings with contemporary black models and other denizens of the Global South in a stylized interrogation of the historical legacy of fine art. By conceptualizing Wiley's portraiture as a practice of worldmaking, I will argue that his work reconfigures the relationship between visual culture and subjectivity, offering a powerful response to the norms of racial, gendered, and class representation inherited from modernity. Consequently, I argue, Wiley's work takes part in an evolving discourse of cosmopolitanism that extends the ongoing work of Paul Gilroy, Anthony Appiah, Monica Miller, Simon Gikandi, and others to imagine modernity, blackness, and diaspora as interrelated phenomena on a planetary scale.
CITATION: Carrington, Andre M.. The cultural politics of worldmaking practice: Kehinde Wiley's cosmopolitanism . : Taylor & Francis Group , 2015. African and Black Diaspora: An International Journal, Vol. 8, No. 2, July 2015, pp. 245-257 - Available at: https://library.au.int/cultural-politics-worldmaking-practice-kehinde-wileys-cosmopolitanism-2