LOS ANGELES, CA.- Roberts Projects announces
Lets Get It On: The Wearable Art of Betye Saar, a landmark publication organized around Saars early work in costume and jewelry design during the 1960s and 1970s, exploring how this formative period profoundly shaped her pioneering work in assemblage and installation. Through original drawings, essays, archival materials and installation images, the book traces Saars evolution from designer to artist, revealing the enduring connections between her wearable creations and her broader visual language.
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Let’s Get It On: The Wearable Art of Betye Saar
A volume on Betye Saar’s wearable art, assemblage, and visual imagination
Explore Betye Saar’s wearable art through adornment, assemblage, identity, material culture, and the powerful creative language of a pioneering artist.
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From theatrical costumes to leather accessories and jewelry, Saars early wearable artworks are as transformative as her assemblages. Until now, this part of her creative life has remained largely unseen and seldom studied, understood as an appendage to the work she made in more traditional fine art mediums rather than being central to them. The archivally-driven publication features newly commissioned scholarship alongside rare photographs, sketches, jewelry, garments and ephemera from Saars personal archives, offering fresh insight into the artists lifelong engagement with materials, memory and Black cultural expression. By drawing connections between creative pursuits previously considered separate and distinct, Lets Get It On provides a radically new assessment of Saars complex and innovative practice and how it evolved throughout her life as a mother and artist.
An introduction by Julie Roberts examines the role that costume design played throughout Saars life and details how the digitization of her archive allowed for the development of the exhibition. In her preface, Elspeth Carruthers, Executive Director, Neubauer Collegium for Culture & Society at The University of Chicago, considers the legacy of Saars work following the exhibition of Lets Get It On: The Wearable Art of Betye Saar at the Collegium. A new interview by CCH Pounder explores Saars theater and costume designs from 196870. Neil Lanes text reflects on his long friendship and creative collaboration with Saar. In his essay, Dieter Roelstraete, Curator, Neubauer Collegium for Culture and Society, explores the material and institutional history of Saars work in costume design. Alexandria Ryahls essay analyzes the theatrical components of Saars costume designs and considers how they informed her work in assemblage and installation. Tracye Saar-Cavanaugh reflects on her childhood growing up in a household where art and life were inseparable from the beginning. Mary Skarbeks essay considers Saars work for the theater as being intertwined not only with her artistic career, but also as an important source of income as she raised her family. An essay by Zoé Whitley constructs a brief history of the Inner City Cultural Center, a multicultural performing arts institution founded in the wake of the 1965 Watts Rebellion, where Saar contributed to early productions.
The book also includes a custom-designed sewing pattern by Saar, inspired by her studio practice, and featuring comprehensive instructions, precision-cut pattern pieces and an exclusive artist-designed iron-on. With its extensive array of reproductions of never-before-seen objects, personal reflections and fresh scholarship, Lets Get It On provides an invaluable resource for understanding the full scope of Saars creative practice and her influence across generations.
Published to accompany the exhibition, Lets Get It On: The Wearable Art of Betye Saar, presented at the Neubauer Collegium for Culture & Society, The University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois (January 30April 27, 2025), and Roberts Projects, Los Angeles, California (May 30August 22, 2026).