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Betye Saar

Betye Saar

American, born 1926

MoMA.org ↗
“To me the trick is to seduce the viewer. If you can get the viewer to look at a work of art, then you might be able to give them some sort of message.” — Betye Saar

In Betye Saar’s work, time is cyclical. History and experiences, emotion and knowledge travel across time and back again, linking the artist and viewers of her work with generations of people who came before them. This is made explicit in her commitment to certain themes, imagery, and objects, and her continual reinvention of them over decades. “I can no longer separate the work by saying this deals with the occult and this deals with shamanism or this deals with so and so…. It’s all together and it’s just my work,” she said in 1989. Saar grew up in Los Angeles and Pasadena, California, and studied design at the University of California, Los Angeles—a career path frequently foisted upon women of color who were interested in the arts, due to the racism and sexism prevalent in universities at the time. Saar eventually studied printmaking, and her earliest works are on paper. Using the soft-ground etching technique, she pressed stamps, stencils, and found materials into her plates to capture their images and textures. Her prints are notably concerned with spirituality, cosmology, and family, as in Anticipation (1961) and Lo, The Mystique City (1965). Saar’s visit to an exhibition of work by Joseph Cornell at the Pasadena Art Museum in 1967 profoundly influenced her own artmaking. Cornell’s practice of collecting and arranging found objects into assemblage boxes inspired her to do the same. She began by inserting her own prints and drawings into window frames, as with Black Girl’s Window, an iconic autobiographical work that also signaled a new interest in addressing race and contemporary events in her art. After the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., her mystical assemblages became increasingly radical. Saar has since repurposed washboards, jewelry boxes, and racist ephemera as a way of reclaiming images and artistic power. For her best-known work, The Liberation of Aunt Jemima (1972), Saar arms a Mammy caricature with a rifle and a hand grenade, rendering her as a warrior against not only the physical violence imposed on black Americans, but also the violence of derogatory stereotypes and imagery. The artist has also repeatedly turned to her family and their history as sources for her work. “Keep for Old Memiors” (1976) includes fragments of letters and photographs saved by the artist’s great aunt Hattie, framed by a pair of women’s gloves that suggest, among other things, the tactility of accessing a physical record of one’s life. The intimacy and scale of Saar’s work encourages a personal connection to the artist and her experience. “To me the trick is to seduce the viewer. If you can get the viewer to look at a work of art, then you might be able to give them some sort of message.” Over the course of her now six-decade career, Saar has continued to make work that honors or critiques the familiar and mines the unknown. “It may not be possible to convey to someone else the mysterious transforming gifts by which dreams, memory, and experience become art. But I like to think that I can try.”

Esther Adler, Associate Curator, Department of Drawings and Prints, and Nectar Knuckles, Curatorial Fellow, 2019

The research for this text was supported by a generous grant from The Modern Women's Fund.

Works in Collection

48 works
"Keep for Old Memiors"

"Keep for Old Memiors"

Betye Saar

1976

A Siege of Sirens

A Siege of Sirens

Betye Saar

1966

Amid Hallucinatory Moons

Amid Hallucinatory Moons

Betye Saar

1962

Anticipation

Anticipation

Betye Saar

1961

Aunt Jemima and Hoo Doo Doll

Aunt Jemima and Hoo Doo Doll

Betye Saar

1972

Black Angus Meets Big Brahma

Black Angus Meets Big Brahma

Betye Saar

1964

Black Girl's Window

Black Girl's Window

Betye Saar

1969

By the Sea

By the Sea

Betye Saar

1961

Carnival

Carnival

Betye Saar

1964

Celestial Scene

Celestial Scene

Betye Saar

1966

El Gato

El Gato

Betye Saar

1960

Enchantress and Twilight Bird

Enchantress and Twilight Bird

Betye Saar

1964

Enfant in the Garden

Enfant in the Garden

Betye Saar

1964

Fireside

Fireside

Betye Saar

1963

Flight

Flight

Betye Saar

1963

Fragments

Fragments

Betye Saar

1976

Girl Children

Girl Children

Betye Saar

1964

He Who...

He Who...

Betye Saar

1965

House of Tarot

House of Tarot

Betye Saar

1966

In the Dell

In the Dell

Betye Saar

1960

In the Sunflower Patch

In the Sunflower Patch

Betye Saar

1963

Les Enfants d'Obscurité

Les Enfants d'Obscurité

Betye Saar

1961

Lo, The Mystique City

Lo, The Mystique City

Betye Saar

1965

Lo, The Pensive Peninsula

Lo, The Pensive Peninsula

Betye Saar

1961