#1, 2020 - 2021
(Blindfolded) Soft pastel on heavyweight paper
30 x 23 in
The Whitney Biennale 2022: Quiet as It’s Kept, featured Awilda Sterling’s work, “…blindfolded”, that was created at the museum, on site. This work is part of ongoing series of dance-drawings, fusing Afro-Caribbean dance, music, drawing, and performance. During the performance of “. . . blindfolded”, she blindfolded herself while listening to improvisational jazz, composed by Miguel Zenón, one of the most influential and innovative jazz musicians of his generation. Moving freely, she translates the music through her body into dance movements on the surface of the paper with sharp actions and a sense of playfulness.
Awilda Sterling
#4, 2020 - 2021
(Blindfolded) Soft pastel on heavyweight paper
30 x 23 in
The dance-drawings resonate with life, visually expanding and exploding with different colors, lines, textures, and depth. Marks of bright pastel extrude past the boundaries of the black construction paper onto the walls. The abstract choreography of pastels act as a kinetic record that utilizes the imaginary.
“In the moment, while making those images, I don’t have a sense of what I am doing, but I am enjoying grasping the concept. Abstraction gives me that openness and that freedom; from there, I can go further, be riskier in how I work. I have been forcing my brain to push ideas for so long that I don’t need to see what I am doing. To me, this is what is most abstract. Precisely because this information is encapsulated in my body, I don’t have to see what I am building on. I just have to feel it first.”
- Awilda Sterling
Awilda Sterling’s practice is deeply informed by her experience as a woman of color and her Afro-Caribbean upbringing in Puerto Rico. Improvisation and abstraction are key elements in her work. She does what feels honest, and centers herself in a vocabulary rooted in traditional Afro-Caribbean dances, cultures, and religions. She aims to bring these traditions into a more contemporary focus. Building from these traditional religious dances, she creates a vocabulary of movement and gestures that translates to active abstraction filled with joy.
Unbound Rhythms expresses the playful nature in Awilda Sterling’s work while cementing her connection from her home in Puerto Rico. Her dance-drawings are a refreshing take on abstract expressionism, where the spirit of Afro-Caribbean culture prevails. Sterling continues adding to the legacy of great Abstract Expressionists like Joan Mitchell, Helen Frankenthaler, Elaine DeKooning, and Olga Albizu.
“In the moment, while making those images, I don’t have a sense of what I am doing, but I am enjoying grasping the concept. Abstraction gives me that openness and that freedom; from there, I can go further, be riskier in how I work. I have been forcing my brain to push ideas for so long that I don’t need to see what I am doing. To me, this is what is most abstract. Precisely because this information is encapsulated in my body, I don’t have to see what I am building on. I just have to feel it first.”
- Awilda Sterling
Awilda Sterling’s practice is deeply informed by her experience as a woman of color and her Afro-Caribbean upbringing in Puerto Rico. Improvisation and abstraction are key elements in her work. She does what feels honest, and centers herself in a vocabulary rooted in traditional Afro-Caribbean dances, cultures, and religions. She aims to bring these traditions into a more contemporary focus. Building from these traditional religious dances, she creates a vocabulary of movement and gestures that translates to active abstraction filled with joy.
Unbound Rhythms expresses the playful nature in Awilda Sterling’s work while cementing her connection from her home in Puerto Rico. Her dance-drawings are a refreshing take on abstract expressionism, where the spirit of Afro-Caribbean culture prevails. Sterling continues adding to the legacy of great Abstract Expressionists like Joan Mitchell, Helen Frankenthaler, Elaine DeKooning, and Olga Albizu.
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