WAKE: Moreau Gallery Exhibition

WAKE: Moreau Gallery Exhibition

Aug 21 - Sep 13

Moreau Center for the Arts

Explore "WAKE," the current exhibition in the Moreau Art Gallery.

WAKE by faculty member, Ian Weaver, will be displayed in the Moreau Galllery from August 21 through September 13. Join the Art Department for a special Opening Reception on Thursday, August 31 at 4:30 PM.

About the Exhibit:

Weaver’s interdisciplinary artistic practice explores memory and considers how individuals and communities construct their own identities.

His attention is particularly focused on the communities of the Near West Side of Chicago, specifically the “Black Bottom” area. Large parts of this multi-ethnic community were destroyed in the 1950s to construct an expressway, and as a result, residents lost much of their material history. 

From this point of loss, Weaver has constructed a fictional history for this community including a fictional group, the Black Knights, presented as a symbolic force of social and political power in the fight for survival amidst displacement and regeneration.

This suit of armor helmet with a Black Power fist as its plumage will be featured in the exhibit "WAKE: Ian Weaver" from Aug. 21 to Sept. 13, 2023, at the Moreau Gallery on the campus of Saint Mary's College. Part of the exhibit includes works that depict Weaver's fictional history for Chicago's displaced "Black Bottom" community, including a fictional group, the Black Knights. The Black Knights works merge his interest in medieval heraldry and Black activism.
With “Wake,” Weaver continues his imaginary construction of this shattered community and responds to “wake” with a selection of objects that collectively weave together intersecting concerns of memory and identity.

In reference to Christina Sharpe’s writings in “In the Wake: On Blackness and Being” on representations of Black life, Weaver considers multiples understandings of “wake”: the temporary and ephemeral path behind a boat, a social ritual associated with funerals and a celebration of the dead, and the idea of awakening or becoming conscious.