NEWSLETTER



DOS & DON'TS

I wonder how many young men have perished trying to keep Ms. Tokyo Posh Pants ’09 happy? Comments/Enlarge | See all


They’re fighting for a world where annoying first year at college know-it-alls can wear popsicle boxes as hats without me wanting to beat them to death even though they’re a girl. Comments/Enlarge | See all






RELATED ARTICLES

ANGELA BOATWRIGHT
From the Annual Vice Photo Issue
BARNSLEY CALLING
We're Going to Have a Bin Party Tonight. ...
MY LITTLE DEAD DICK - PART 2
STEVE & DONNY - PART 3
I like collecting Barbies. I got this new...



FROM THIS ISSUE

MY FRIEND
Cat Power Can't Scream Like Emma Louise N...
NEW HORIZONS
And Underwater Love
HOLY SHIT!
The New Fucking Carnage Tape Has Finally ...
THE ERA HAS ARRIVED
American Computer Music Saves the Day



ALSO BY TIERNEY WILLIAMS

QUITE CONTRARY
Mary Ping Takes On Gucci and Wins
FROM CUTE TO CREEPY
Laylah Ali Chops Off Her Green Head
YOU'RE FIRED
Brian Jonestown Massacre Want You Gone
FUCK EVERYBODY
The Bronx Stick Hot Pokers In Punk's Anus

See all articles by this contributor








When people look at Laylah Ali’s art they inevitably think, “Look at the cute little green roundheaded guys doing all the funny stuff. It’s like a comic book but grown up. Neat.” Then they notice that the little guys are getting their hands chopped off, wearing menacing black hoods and bandages, and having invasive surgical procedures performed on them. Then they say, “Oh shit, wait.”

Ali’s simple characters tell a wordless story of power, revolution, fear, and redemption. Her art is about growing up black and not really experiencing overt racial discrimination but getting mixed messages about equality as a whole. As the iconic figures go from protests to massacres, it’s kind of hard to tell who the bad guys are, but a pervasive sense of coercion fuels everything. That’s where the “dramatic pause” comes in.

Ali, who is experienced in both studio art and English literature, is as gifted a narrator as she is a painter. By stripping these works of background imagery, she makes us take the events in purely allegorical terms. And by giving the figures no specific markers of ethnicity, but still clearly creating two distinct groups, Ali gets the viewer to consider the stereotyping and classifying that we’re all complicit in—way before we have a chance to feel too creepy to think about it.

TIERNEY WILLIAMS

See all articles by this contributor

< PREV

Comments


POST A COMMENT [SIGN IN]
Hi, in case you haven't heard, you can now sign up to become a "member" of Viceland.com, which entitles you to all sorts of amazing benefits like pictures and a nickname. Click here to make your own profile. You can still comment if you don't, but you gotta do it all 'nonymously.

Name:
Comment: