MILWAUKEE, WI.- Sculpture Milwaukee and the Bronzeville Center for the Arts debuted a suite of public artworks by Martine Syms, the celebrated multidisciplinary artist who reconsiders Black identity and her own identity as a Black female artist, in the heart of Bronzeville.
A binding principle of the L.A.-native Syms far-ranging output a body of work including video, photography, performance, and writing is to pull apart familiar tropes of language and image-making and rework them, with humor and punch, to open new possibilities.
Contributing to the Milwaukee Art scene
While Syms has shown work inside many prestigious institutions, shes also embraced public art, showing her work in densely populated places like Times Square, said Phoenix Brown, BCAs curator. Presenting her work on North Avenuewhere were effectively turning the street into an exhibition spaceimmediately invites viewers into her creative process.
Part of the reason why Syms chose to present these new pieces in Milwaukee is because she appreciates the citys open and vibrant arts scene, said John Riepenhoff, executive director of Sculpture Milwaukee.
While she was an undergraduate student at the Art Institute of Chicago, Martine came up to Milwaukee for screenings and openings, and she understood this as a place where the arts community is remarkably open to experimentation, Riepenhoff said. Presenting her work in Bronzeville not only creates a tight, immediate connection to the local community but puts us in the center of important international art conversations.
The exhibition, centered along North Avenue, features two new works, A Short Meditation (2025) and an untitled photo (2025), as well as two earlier works customized for this site-specific installation, Find A Way (2022) and Belief Strategy XIII (2016).
In Find A Way (2022), a 148-foot fence banner repeating the titular phrase, Syms creates an enlivening mantra for modern worriers. The new untitled photo, mounted on the signpost of the now-defunct Big Load Coin Laundry, emerged from Syms daily photography and writing practice; a picture of a boardwalk and surrounding foliage Syms took in Brazil, the image is bleached with light leaks to point of abstraction and glows like beacon.
Short Meditation (2025) is another banner with an aphoristic message mounted on the fascia of the vacant Big Load laundromat.
In Belief Strategy (2016), a weblike cucoloris dappling light filter fixed to a window of Gallery 507 (BCAs current headquarters), she deploys her signature shade of purple to subliminally remind viewers of The Color Purple, the 1982 novel by Alice Walker, an artist working in a Black feminist tradition that Im trying to be part with my own work, as Syms has said.
Martine Syms is an artist who has earned wide recognition for a practice that combines conceptual grit, humor, and social commentary. She has shown extensively, including in exhibitions at the Museum of Modern Art, the Art Institute of Chicago, and the Philadelphia Museum of Art. She has also done commissioned work for brands such as Louis Vuitton, Prada, Nike, and Celine, among others. She is a recipient of the Herb Alpert Award, the Creative Capital Award, a United States Artists Fellowship, the Louis Comfort Tiffany Foundation award, the Future Fields Art Prize, and, in 2023, of a Guggenheim Fellowship. Syms is the writer and director of The African Desperate (MUBI), which was the closing night film of New Directors/New Films 2022 festival and nominated in 2023 for an Independent Spirit Award.