"Kehinde Wiley: A New Republic" at OKCMOA through Sept. 10

“Arms of Nicolas Ruteriuss” is part of Wiley’s stained-glass collection. Photo provided.

Oklahoma City - The Oklahoma City Museum of Art's (OKCMOA) summer blockbuster, Kehinde Wiley: A New Republic will be on display at the museum through Sept. 10. A New Republic presents over 50 paintings and sculptures spanning the celebrated artist's 14-year career.

"I hope visitors to this exhibition will enjoy not only the beauty, color and scale of Mr. Wiley's work but also the discussions that these artworks provoke," said Eugenie Tsai, curator of A New Republic and the John and Barbara Vogelstein Curator of Contemporary Art at the Brooklyn Museum.

"This is an exhibition that needs to be experienced in person and preferably with friends or family members. The artwork opens up a dialogue with the viewer and I think summer visitors to OKCMOA will enjoy the many conversations that arise from this exhibition."


“The Two Sisters” is part of the only female portraiture in the exhibition. Photo by Jason Wyche.

"Kehinde Wiley bridges the gap between contemporary and historical art," added Michael Anderson, Ph.D., OKCMOA director of curatorial affairs. "His paintings and sculptures reference historical artworks while including modern dress, bright colors and 21st-century subjects. By replacing historical subjects with contemporary African-American men and women, Wiley encourages us to think deeper about representation, gender roles and power in the context of art history. We are honored to host his work here in Oklahoma City."

Visitors can enjoy A New Republic on the Museum's first and third floors. It begins in the first-floor galleries with Wiley's earliest work, created around 2001 during his residency at the Studio Museum in Harlem. It was around this time that Wiley began his process of "street casting," pulling subjects off the street to pose for photos that he later referenced in his works.


“Mrs. Waldorf Astoria” demonstrates the beauty, color and scale of Wiley's work. Photo by Jason Wyche.

The exhibition continues with Wiley's experimentation in referencing specific paintings by renowned masters such as Titian, Van Dyke, Ingres and Manet. Works such as Napoleon Leading the Army over the Alps, Portrait of a Venetian Ambassador, Aged 59, II, Colonel Platoff on his Charger and Equestrian Portrait of King Philip II (Michael Jackson) directly reference paintings of a similar name.

The exhibition resumes in the Museum's third floor galleries with Wiley's World Stage series. Beginning in 2006, Wiley opened a satellite studio in Beijing and began street casting international subjects. The World Stage series includes subjects from Brazil, China, Israel, France, Haiti, Jamaica, Lagos, Dakar and Sri Lanka.

The final sections of the exhibition include An Economy of Grace, which features the only female portraiture in the exhibition, as well as Wiley's recent stained-glass work.

Adult tickets to the exhibition are $12 and include admission to the entire Museum. Discounted tickets are available for seniors, students, groups and children. Members of the Museum, children under five and active military members and their families receive free admission to the exhibition.

Kehinde Wiley: A New Republic is organized by the Brooklyn Museum and made possible by the Henry Luce Foundation and the National Endowment for the Arts.

Accredited by the American Alliance of Museums, the OKCMOA serves over 125,000 visitors annually from all 50 states and more than 30 foreign countries and presents exhibitions from throughout the world. The Museum's collection covers a period of five centuries with highlights in European and American art from the 19th and 20th centuries, a growing collection of contemporary art and one of the world's largest public collections of glass sculpture by Dale Chihuly. For more information, visit okcmoa.com.

Copyright 2017 The Gayly – August 28, 2017 @ 1 p.m. CDT.