Fred Wilson: Reflections
Fred Wilson (b. 1954, Bronx, NY) has gained widespread recognition for his groundbreaking artistic practice, which challenges assumptions about history, culture, and race. By reframing cultural narratives and recontextualizing objects, Wilson shifts perspectives to reveal hidden biases and erroneous premises. Fred Wilson: Reflections, the artist’s first museum survey in over a decade, continues to unpack, deconstruct, and reimagine cultural forms and social structures. The exhibition features Wilson’s striking black-and-white Murano glass chandeliers, mirrors, and teardrops—works of shimmering beauty that allude to repressed and traumatic histories of the African diaspora. A large-scale presentation of black and white paintings that reference the flags of African and African diasporic nations, installed like a mural in the Foster stairwell, examines fractured identities, losses, and the lingering wounds inflicted by colonization and its aftermath.
Complementing the ethereal poetics and political resonance of his glassworks and Flag paintings, the exhibition will debut Black Now, a conceptual installation consisting of thousands of found objects Wilson has collected since 2005, all tied to the color black or themes of Blackness. The immersive installation invites reflection on "black" not just as a color but as a lens through which to examine shifting cultural and historical attitudes toward Blackness, as well as the subliminal messages embedded in everyday objects. Fred Wilson: Reflections is a powerful exploration of the artist’s transformative impact on art history and cultural discourse. Like Wilson’s black glass mirrors—absorbing, reflecting, obfuscating—Reflections compels us to confront what had been redacted from our collective memory, shifting our perspectives and understanding of identity, heritage, and the unseen forces that shape history.
Fred Wilson: Black Now is curated by Dr. Gannit Ankori, Henry and Lois Foster Director and Chief Curator, Rose Art Museum and Professor of Fine Arts and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies, Brandeis University.