1/2

Nari Ward

Breathing Bars Diagonal Left

About

Known as “Breathing Panels,” Nari Ward’s series of large-scale abstract compositions take visual cues from African American history in the United States. In Breathing Bars Diagonal Left, several holes puncture the surface and construct a distinct shape known to some as a BaKongo Cosmogram. Holes in the shape of this African prayer symbol appear in the floorboards of the First African Baptist Church in Savannah, Georgia.

Their historical purpose was to serve as breathing holes for enslaved people traveling beneath the floorboards of the Savannah church, a stop on the Underground Railroad. Ward embeds this motif onto his creative surface. Brilliant lines of incised copper radiate from the work’s sculptural center. Against a purple-blue patina background, vague impressions of a metal jail cell and the shadows of handcuffs emerge.

Artist

Nari Ward

Dimensions

60 in. × 60 in. × 2 1/8 in. (152.4 × 152.4 × 5.4 cm)

Credit Line

Art Bridges

Date

2020

Medium

Oak wood, copper sheet, copper nails, and darkening patina

Object Number

AB.2022.1

Signed

verso: [signature]

Provenance

(Lehmann Maupin, NYC, NY); purchased by Art Bridges, TX, 2022

Availability

    Discover More