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Don’t Go Crossing My Fence
Lonnie Holley 
Photo by Gavin Ashworth
Don't Go Crossing My Fence
Don’t Go Crossing My Fence
Lonnie Holley 
Photo by Gavin Ashworth
Don’t Go Crossing My Fence Lonnie Holley Photo by Gavin Ashworth
Record Details

Don't Go Crossing My Fence

Artist ((b. 1950))
Date1994
Place/RegionAlabama, United States
MediumWood, garden hose, mop, lamp base, and other found materials
Dimensions81 × 52 × 23"
Credit LineGift of Ron and June Shelp
Accession number2013.5.2
Copyright© Artist Rights Society (ARS), New York
Description

Lonnie Holley’s interdisciplinary practice encompasses, among other forms, sculpture and spoken-word performances. Rooted in the cultural tradition of the “yard show” by Black artists in the American South, his pieces introduce political, autobiographical, and poetic narratives. Speaking about the mnemonic quality of the material he uses for his assemblages, Holley said: “Today is not the same as yesterday. The trials and the tribulations of today are harder than yesterday. It seems like the wire, the protective fence itself, kind of keeps everything well balanced. There are big crosses, little crosses, crosses that support and that hold the fence together. The fence can easily indicate ‘being behind it’ and ‘locked up.’ Prisoners are locked behind a fence. When we wear a cross, or when we show a cross, we try to show that something is going on spiritually with us, that we remember the crucifix, remember the struggle that went about on the cross, remember the death, remember the blood, remember the turmoil of the body being cracked and shifted and broken. And then, also, we remember the nails, remember the harsh pain, one human body having so much pain. How can we not see these crosses?”

Valérie Rousseau, “Don't Go Crossing My Fence,” exhibition label for Self-Taught Genius: Treasures from the American Folk Art Museum. Stacy C. Hollander and Valérie Rousseau, curators. New York: American Folk Art Museum, 2014.

Object information is a work in progress and may be updated with new research. Records are reviewed and revised, and the American Folk Art Museum welcomes additional information. 

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