Art

Conceptual artist Lorraine O’Grady dies at 90.

Maxwell Rabb
Dec 13, 2024 9:05PM, via Lorraine O’Grady Trust

Portrait of Lorraine O’Grady, 2018. Photo by Ross Collab. © Ross Collab. Courtesy of the Lorraine O’Grady Trust.

Lorraine O’Grady, a conceptual artist who fiercely advocated for Black women’s perspectives in art, has passed away at 90. Her death was confirmed by a trust in her name and her representing gallery, Mariane Ibrahim, which shared the announcement on December 13th. The cause of death was not specified.

Reflecting on O’Grady’s legacy, gallerist Mariane Ibrahim wrote on Instagram: “Lorraine O’Grady was a force to be reckoned with. She refused to be labeled or limited, embracing the multiplicity of history that reflected her identity and life’s journey. Lorraine paved a path for artists and women artists of color, to forge critical and confident pathways between art and forms of writing.”

Lorraine O’Grady, Mlle Bourgeoise Noire Goes to the New Museum, 1981/2007. © Lorraine O’Grady. Courtesy of Lorraine O’Grady Trust.

O’Grady’s career was defined by a commitment to challenging closed-minded narratives around race, gender, and class through her art and writing. She worked in various mediums, including photography, collage, and performance. O’Grady’s art and cultural criticism were widely recognized for insightful analyses of feminism, Surrealism, and the representation of Black women in art, among other topics. Most notably, her 1992 essay “Olympia’s Maid: Reclaiming Black Female Subjectivity” critically examined Édouard Manet’s Olympia (1863), highlighting the art historical oversight of Laure, the Black maid depicted in the painting.

Born in Boston in 1934 to Jamaican immigrants, O’Grady spent her childhood around her mother’s clothing business. She attended Wellesley College, where she earned degrees in economics and Spanish literature in 1955. Her career path included jobs at government offices before she decided to enter the Iowa Writers Workshop in 1965. She left the program in 1967, after meeting her husband, Chappelle Freeman Jr., with whom she relocated to Chicago, where she lived for the next six years.

After landing in New York in 1973, O’Grady pursued several jobs: She was a music critic for Rolling Stone and a literature teacher at the School of Visual Arts. By the late ’70s, she decided to pursue a career as an artist. One of her most notable early series, “Cutting Out the New York Times,” started in 1977, and involved transforming newspaper clippings into poignant critiques of contemporary society.

Lorraine O’Grady, Cutting Out CONYT 04, 1977/2017. Courtesy of Lorraine O’Grady Trust.

At 45, O’Grady made her first public performance of Mlle Bourgeoise Noire (1980–83), a piece in which she played a character wearing a white gown made from 180 pairs of white gloves, a sash bearing the title “Mlle Bourgeoise Noire” (Miss Black Middle-Class), and wielded a cat-o’-nine-tails made of white chrysanthemums. Through this persona, she confronted the exclusion and marginalization of Black artists. Her work continued through the 1990s and into the 2000s with photographic collages and performances that critiqued systems of power.

In recent years, O’Grady’s artwork has gained broader acclaim. A compilation of her writings was published by Duke University Press in 2020. The writings were edited by Aruna D’Souza, who co-curated the artist’s retrospective at the Brooklyn Museum in 2021. Mariane Ibrahim announced its representation of O’Grady in 2023 and presented a major exhibition of the artist’s work in Chicago in April 2024, titled “The Knight, or Lancela Palm-and-Steel.”

“Our lives, though shaped by different histories, mirrored in ways that connected each other,” wrote Ibrahim. “Her legacy will live on, a force that continues to echo through everything she created, touching all who encounter her work with the same power and depth she embodied.”

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Maxwell Rabb
Maxwell Rabb is Artsy’s Staff Writer.